The Asian Age

India global hub for skilled workers

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Mumbai, April 1: With a growing ageing population across most developed nations, India is poised to play an important role in filling the demand-supply gap of skilled workers globally.

Over the past decade, India has become a favoured destinatio­n for hiring skilled workers, experienci­ng an annual growth rate ranging from 15-20 per cent, largely due to the ageing population in developed nations, said TeamLease Degree Apprentice­ship vice president and business head Dhriti Prasanna Mahanta

Going forward, this trend of global mobility of Indian workers is expected to witness 28-30 per cent growth in the next five years, he added.

According to reports, India is a young nation with 554 million people falling in the 15-64 years age group, Mahanta said.

“The Global Skill Gap Study’ by national skill developmen­t corporatio­n (NSDC) showed a demand for Indian talent across diverse sectors worldwide and projection­s indicate significan­t demand in regions such as the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Germany, Netherland­s, UK, Sweden, Switzerlan­d, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, USA, Japan, and Malaysia, he said.

The Indian Internatio­nal Skilling Centre (IISC) network aims to foster internatio­nal workforce mobility, placing 1,00,000 skilled Indian candidates overseas, training 2,50,000 candidates through predepartu­re orientatio­n, and certifying 25,000 workers through recognitio­n of prior learning assessment and certificat­ion overseas, he added.

The ongoing labour agreements with countries like Japan and France is also helping India increase its prominence in the global labour market, Mahanta noted.

According to data, Saudi Arabia has hired the maximum number of Indians (13,944), followed by Qatar (3,646) and UAE with 2,941 Indian workers.

A 12,000 people are currently undergoing training for internatio­nal mobility, with 2,008 healthcare workers learning foreign languages, he said.

THE ONGOING labour agreements with countries like Japan and France is also helping India increase its prominence in the global labour market.

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