Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

LOOMING JOBLESSNES­S

Only 140 mn of 300 mn who entered labour market between 1991 and 2013 have found jobs; tough task ahead for policymake­rs

- HT Correspond­ent

India is likely to see a severe shortage of jobs in the next 35 years, the latest Asia-Pacific Human Developmen­t Report has warned. Of the 300 million who entered the labour market between 1991 and 2013 found jobs in the country, says the report released by the UNDP on Wednesday.

Two years into office, the Modi government faces the challenge to fulfill a key election promise to find jobs for armies of young hopefuls, amid signs that factories and firms are hiring at a pace far slower than the millions who are joining the queue.

According to the latest AsiaPacifi­c Human Developmen­t Report, only 140 million, or less than half of 300 million who entered labour market between 1991 and 2013, have found jobs.

The report warned that India was likely to see severe shortage of jobs in the next 35 years.

This mirrors the trends in India’s official employment data.

Employment generation in eight key sectors fell to a sevenyear low in 2015, labour bureau data released recently showed.

About 12-million people join the jobseekers’ queue in India every year. While the industry is creating jobs, too many of them are in the informal sector, which accounts for 84% of current jobs.

The UNDP report said that while a vibrant informal economy keeps a large number of low-wage workers employed, such employment leads to many problems, including inadequate protection for workers. For instance, in India, 1 in every 10 workers is employed in the constructi­on sector.

On the other hand, employment growth in services has been slow in recent years. India’s challenge is to create the conditions for faster growth of productive jobs outside of agricultur­e.

According to labour bureau data, textiles, leather, metals, automobile­s, gems and jewellery, transport, IT and the handloom sectors together created 135,000 jobs during 2015, 67% lower than 421,000 jobs added in 2014, the last year of the UPA government.

Worse, during October to December last year, 20,000 people lost jobs in these sectors, partly because of shrinking exports. Merchandis­e exports have shrunk for the 15th successive months till February as orders continue to dry out from much of Europe.

The unemployme­nt comes at a time when every sector is short of skilled workers — from masons to teachers to waiters to engineers — perhaps a reflection of an education system, which is not imparting skills the economy needs.

Of India’s 1.2-billion population, 60% are of the working age. And of the 12-million individual­s who join the queue of job seekers every year, only 3% undergo vocational training.

How soon can India bridge the skill deficit?

“We have started moving into the right direction as framework to bridge the skill gap has been put in place, and we will now start executing the policies,” said Dilip Chenoy, former CEO, National Skill Developmen­t Corp, which was set up as part of the government’s National Skill Developmen­t Mission.

NSDC partners have skilled 29.79 lakh people through its ecosystem for 2015-16. NSDC funded partners have trained over 13.55 lakh students for 2015-16.

Populous, and strategic, neighbour China’s manufactur­ing capabiliti­es have long overshadow­ed India, and the government’s push for manufactur­ing through the signature Make in India comes at a time when many big companies are seeking an alternativ­e to the Asian giant as costs and risks rise in the dragon economy.

But will Make in India be able to spin jobs in large numbers given the automated and robotised manufactur­ing solutions? The government said that there are signs that the “Make in India” initiative has led to more hiring.

“Manufactur­ing facilities take time to set up, but the jobs which get created to facilitate these units have started growing. Be it in constructi­on or logistics, the sectors, which become a backbone to technology etc have started coming up with new openings and are hiring people,” said an official who did not wish to be identified.

The Economic Survey tabled in Parliament in February has also said job creation remains a key concern. “India’s economy needs to create enough ‘good jobs’ —those that are safe and pay well, and encourage firms and workers to improve skills and productivi­ty.”

Only 4% of the workforce has got vocational skills. Strengthen­ing the existing workforce with required skills is a bigger challenge than creating jobs RITUPARNA CHAKRABORT­Y, president, Indian Staffing Federation

 ??  ?? 12-mn people join the workforce every year
12-mn people join the workforce every year

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