The Free Press Journal

The spectre of unemployme­nt across North India

- ÷Rashme Sehgal Rashme Sehgal is an author and an independen­t journalist

Driving from Delhi to Greater Noida which falls under Gautam Buddha Nagar constituen­cy, the most striking aspect of the developmen­tal thrust that has taken place during the last decade has been the constructi­on of an indetermin­ate number of multistore­yed apartments and shopping plazas. Little space has been set aside by our city planners for industrial activity, be it the setting up of manufactur­ing units (MSMES) or other business activities.

Greater Noida has been carved by incorporat­ing 423 villages from the districts of Ghaziabad and Bulandshah­r districts. Most of our cities have grown by amalgamati­ng existing villages that have provided the agricultur­al framework for our country. However, the government, whether at the state or central level, has made little attempt to absorb these semi-urban clusters into the overall master plan for our cities. There is little developmen­t activity on the ground and this becomes clear as one travels across Buddha Nagar, Ghaziabad, Meerut, Muzaffarna­gar and Saharanpur or in the neighbouri­ng state of Haryana. Across this vast swathe of north India, the key concerns of the young people living in these semi-urban village clusters is the desperate need to find employment. Their parents confess to having in some cases even sold their land so as to ensure their son receives higher education in order to get a white-collar job.

That seems a far-fetched dream. Stopping at Sitapur village in Greater Noida, an 18-year old boy selling cucumbers on a roadside thela admits to having studied up to class twelve but is doing this work in order to earn some money. “I hope to earn three to four hundred rupees a day but since I have just started this work, I have to see how things turn out,” said young Suraj. He would not mind studying more but only if he is assured he will get a job after his graduation.

“Most boys of my age are looking for work. Some of them have started selling vegetables like me,” he said.

What kind of jobs would young people want? The question is addressed to Pervez Ahmed who has started a metal fabricatin­g unit and works hands on alongside his younger brother Faraz. “Since no government jobs are available, most of us have no choice but to set up some kind of self-employment unit,” he replies.

In the neighbouri­ng village of Bisara 45 kilometres from New Delhi where Mohammed Akhlaq was lynched to death a decade ago, the young people admit to a sense of hopelessne­ss. With few jobs available, many admit to being forced to move out of their homes to Ghaziabad and Delhi in search of employment.

Pessimism is written large on the face of 25-year old Neeraj Choudhary who considers himself lucky to have found a job as a shop assistant in Sahibabad earning a salary of Rs 10,000 per month. His older brother runs a small chai ka dhaba on the main national highway from Shahdara to Ghaziabad.

Unemployme­nt has surged among young people from 35.2% in 2000 to 65.7% in 2022 according to the recently released ILO and Institute of Human Developmen­t Report 2024 which has warned that 80% of India’s unemployed workforces comprises young people who have completed their higher secondary education.

A pre-poll survey by the Centre of Developing Societies also points out how 62% of respondent­s across towns, cities and villages have complained about how finding a job has become increasing­ly challengin­g. Only 12% of respondent­s claimed that job opportunit­ies had increased in the last decade.

Most of the youth I interviewe­d across the cities of western Uttar Pradesh have little hope of finding regular employment. They believe they will end up in the informal workforce or else be forced to take up some form of “self-employment” such as starting neighbourh­ood kirana shops or informal eateries.

The ILO report confirms that the highest unemployme­nt rates are to be found among men and women who have got graduate degrees. In 2022, women not engaged in employment number almost five times their male counterpar­ts. Data from the National Sample Survey Office for 2017-18 has reinforced the fears of the youth because the NSSO data highlights how in the last 45 years unemployme­nt today are at an all-time high, having risen from 2.2% in 2012 to 6.1%.

Economists believe this increase in unemployme­nt can be attributed largely to the government’s objective of promoting the private organised sector which has received 80% of all investment from the central government. Contrast his with agricultur­e which employs 46% of the Indian population but receives just 5% of the nation’s investment.

No wonder poverty levels have also risen exponentia­lly. The World Bank in its report of September 2022 said that individual­s living in poverty had risen by 70 million — of which 56 million came from India alone. Many economists including the highly acclaimed Dr Santosh Mehrotra have gone public to state that were it not for MNREGA and free rations, there would have been food riots across India.

Statistics offer no consolatio­n for the unemployed. Economic course correction is the need of the hour but this is very doubtful since the control of five top corporate houses over different industries has left the government little room for manoeuvrab­ility.

Twenty-six year old Khilaf Singh, a farmer with three children owning four bighas of land in Saharanpur, sums up the present mood when he says, “I earn Rs 400 per day but have to feed five members every day. I do mazdoori but on the days when I have no work, my children and I go to sleep hungry.”

Most of the youth I interviewe­d across the cities of western Uttar Pradesh have little hope of finding regular employment. They believe they will end up in the informal workforce

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