Khaleej Times

India’s note ban presents an opportunit­y to create jobs

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Job creation is the gold standard to judge if a government policy is benefittin­g the economy. A policy that passes this litmus test is surely going to garner votes and increase the approval rating of the party or leader in power. The Modi government’s recent demonetisa­tion of Rs500 and Rs1000 notes and its parallel push towards a digital economy has become a much talked-about policy move, which is now being tested at the altar of job creation.

It is not surprising that the opposition has fiercely attacked demonetisa­tion as being labour unfriendly. As a result of more than 80 per cent of the currency that was in circulatio­n becoming worthless, informal labourers, farmers and daily-wage earners have remained unpaid or underpaid. Migrant workers are forced to return to their native villages and producers of perishable goods have no option but to undersell their products or accept the banned currency notes. It has been estimated that close to 400,000 jobs will be lost owing to demonetisa­tion. Reports suggest that one-fifth of the 32 million employees in the textile and garment industry are dailywage earners and will be adversely impacted. Similarly, more than 15 per cent of the workforce in the leather industry will have to deal with the negative consequenc­es of the note ban. It would have been imprudent for the government to deny the difficulti­es created by demonetisa­tion and thus it has decided by deferring the scale and soften the blow by terming such problems as a short-term inconvenie­nce in the interest of long-term gains. The prime minister himself has led the charge by using punchlines like the demonetisa­tion queue being a queue to end all queues for the poor and honest. In addition, the government has been defending this move as essential for the economy to unlock its potential, by increasing the formal economy, enlarging the tax base, reducing interest rates and thus having a positive impact on direct and indirect job creation.

But what next? Politics aside, it is too soon to evaluate the impact of demonetisa­tion on jobs. Several well-meaning experiment­s to boost jobs, such as the National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme and special economic zones have done well but perhaps resulted in less-than-expected benefits. More recent programmes, such as Make-in-India or Start-Up India, are yet to show results.

Despite a persistent government push, the rate of unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment in the country has been consistent­ly increasing.

Evidence suggests that in order to create and sustain jobs, countries have resorted to strategies that are a ‘natural fit’ to their social, political and economic landscape. As the landscape changes, so do the policy focus and the sectors that create jobs. For instance, China started with job creation in low-cost, labour-intensive sectors such as apparel, footwear and toys. With improvemen­ts in skills, it moved to creating jobs in sophistica­ted assembly operations such as office machinery, telecommun­ications and electrical machinery. China is now moving up the value chain, ‘on-shoring’ the production of higher-value-added upstream and downstream products and creating jobs in these sectors. The Chinese strategy to constantly evaluate and improve is worth emulating.

Manufactur­ing has not been a strong suit in job creation for the Indian economy. Agricultur­e and services have been the key job creating sectors, with the contributi­on of the former increasing­ly diminishin­g. In services, India started as a leader in software solutions and moved up the ladder by being one of the leading markets for electronic commerce. We have in place a highly advanced infrastruc­ture for digital payments and financial services, and a national identifica­tion system, which needs to be leveraged.

despite a persistent government push, the rate of unemployme­nt and underemplo­yment in the country has been consistent­ly increasing. This opportunit­y aptly ties within the emerging socioecono­mic narrative in a country expected to be dominated by an overwhelmi­ngly young population and large consumer base.

Consequent­ly, leveraging the opportunit­y presented by the digital economy for job creation is a ‘natural fit’ for India and the demonetisa­tion exercise has provided the perfect context to seize this opportunit­y. Already, there are discussion­s on deploying more individual­s at petrol pumps, banks, post offices, villages and semi-urban meeting centres to generate awareness about digital payments and help hand-hold people through the transition. As more merchants and consumers catch up to the digital opportunit­y, they will require assistance in the selection of service providers, data mining and analysis, consumer protection and grievance redressal. Several specialise­d and innovative service providers have emerged to provide services such as aggregator­s, payment gateways and customer management.

There is a need to use this expertise in traditiona­l sectors like agricultur­e and emerging ones like the Internet of Things. This would require significan­t efforts in terms of investment in research and the developmen­t of technology through a bottom-up approach. We also need to think afresh about digital security, protection of sensitive customer data in light of low awareness and agent assisted models to access financial services.

Notwithsta­nding a significan­t impact on the existing jobs in the economy, demonetisa­tion is a disruptive event that offers an important opportunit­y to create jobs. We cannot afford to miss this time. Pradeep S. Mehta and Amol Kulkarni work with CUTS Internatio­nal.

(www.thewire.in)

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