THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF EMPLOYMENT IN INDIA

Why in news: India’s job market is struggling to absorb its rising number of graduates. Despite growing formalisation, high youth unemployment and poor job-readiness signal a deep crisis in skills, employability, and structural reforms.

1. Context & Background

  • Lakhs of students graduate each year from universities, ITIs, and skill programs.
  • Yet, there is a mismatch between education output and meaningful employment.
  • The issue is not just unemployment, but unemployability.

2. EPFO Data: Signs of Formalisation

  • Post-pandemic dip in enrolments is now reversing—March 2025 data shows a rise in formal workforce participation.
  • 18–25 age group forms a major portion of new enrolments (18–21 alone contributes 18–22%).
  • Indicates formalisation but raises questions about job quality, wages, and long-term security.

3. Youth Unemployment Crisis India Employment Report 2024 (ILO + IHD):

  • Youth account for 83% of India’s unemployed.
  • Share of educated unemployed has doubled in two decades.

4. Economic Survey 2023-24:

  • Only ~50% of graduates are job-ready.
  • Major gaps in digital and professional skills.

5. AI & Technological Disruption

  • Rapid tech transformation and AI pose risks to traditional job roles.

Future of Jobs Report 2025 (WEF):

  • 170 million jobs may be created by 2030.
  • 92 million jobs displaced, net gain of 78 million (7% growth).
  • But without massive reskilling, most Indian youth will be unprepared.

6. Informality & Skill Deficit

  • 90% of Indian workforce is informal; salaried jobs declining since 2018.
  • Contractual jobs rising, but with limited social protection.

7. Alarming skill gaps:

  • 75% can’t send email with attachment.

Unemployment – Meaning

  • Unemployment refers to a situation where individuals are willing to work and are actively seeking jobs but are unable to find employment.
  • It is an important indicator of a country’s economic performance.

As per the International Labour Organization (ILO), a person is unemployed if they are without work, available for work, and actively looking for a job.

Types of Unemployment

1. Involuntary Unemployment

  • Occurs when people are actively seeking jobs but cannot find any due to lack of opportunities.
  • Example: Fresh graduates applying for jobs but getting no offers.

2. Voluntary Unemployment

  • When individuals choose not to work despite job availability, often due to dissatisfaction with salary or working conditions.
  • Example: An engineer refusing a low-paying customer service job.

3. Structural Unemployment

  • Arises from economic or technological changes leading to a mismatch between workers’ skills and job requirements.
  • Example: Factory workers lose jobs as machines replace manual labor.

4. Seasonal Unemployment

  • Occurs in industries with seasonal demand, where workers are unemployed during the off-season.
  • Example: Tourist guides out of work during non-peak travel months.

5. Cyclical Unemployment

  • Caused by economic downturns or recessions when businesses cut back on hiring or lay off workers.
  • Example: Retail staff laid off during a financial crisis due to low sales.

6. Disguised Unemployment

  • Seen when more people are employed than necessary, leading to low or zero productivity.
  • Example: Several interns doing repetitive work that adds no real value.

7. Frictional Unemployment

  • Short-term unemployment during job changes or transitions.
  • Example: A person leaving one job to find a better opportunity elsewhere.

Causes of Unemployment in India

1. Sluggish Economic Growth

  • India’s economy, despite growth, fails to generate enough jobs for its rapidly expanding workforce.
  • Slow industrial and manufacturing sector growth limits employment opportunities.

2. Overpopulation and Demographic Pressure

  • Rapid population growth increases the number of job seekers beyond available opportunities.
  • This creates intense competition and a high unemployment rate 

3. Seasonal Nature of Agriculture

  • Agriculture, a major employer in rural India, offers seasonal and temporary jobs.
  • Off-season periods lead to underemployment and disguised unemployment in rural areas.

4. Dominance of Informal Sector

  • Over 80-90% of the workforce works in informal or unorganised sectors (gig workers, daily wage laborers) with low wages and job insecurity.
  • Lack of formal contracts and social security make employment precarious.

5. Underperforming Service Sector Employment

  • Although the service sector contributes over 50% of India’s GDP, it employs a smaller proportion of the workforce compared to developed countries, limiting job creation.

6. Mismatch between Education and Industry Needs

  • Education system does not impart industry-relevant or practical skills.
  • Around 80% of engineering graduates reportedly lack employable skills.

This results in a high number of educated but unemployable youth.

7. Skill Gaps in Emerging Technologies

  • Rapid growth in sectors like AI, data analytics, robotics, and blockchain demands specialized skills that many job seekers lack.
  • The Economic Survey 2024 warns of AI’s disruptive potential, stressing the need for reskilling.

8. Automation and Technological Displacement

  • Automation replaces routine jobs in manufacturing, services, and agriculture, reducing traditional employment.
  • Demand shifts towards highly skilled workers, creating a skills divide.

9. Limited Accessibility and Social Barriers

  • Issues like illiteracy, gender bias, poor communication skills, lack of transportation, and childcare facilities restrict workforce participation, especially among women and marginalized communities.
  • Caste and regional disparities further limit access to employment.

10. Slow Growth of Manufacturing Sector 

  • Manufacturing sector growth remains below potential, limiting large-scale job creation.
  • Challenges include infrastructure gaps, regulatory hurdles, and low investment.

11. Economic Informality and Lack of Social Security

  • Absence of strong labour laws and social security discourages formal hiring by employers.
  • Contractual and casual jobs grow, but with poor benefits and low wages.

12. Global Economic Factors

  • External shocks, trade disruptions, and global recessions can slow economic growth and job creation in export-dependent sectors.

Unemployment Rate in India 2024

According to the latest Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS), is 3.2% in 2023–24 in the usual status category.

In the Current Weekly Status, the unemployment rate for individuals aged 15 and above decreased to 4.9% in 2024, down from 5% in the previous year.

Key Methodologies Used to Measure Unemployment in India

1. Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS)

  • Conducted annually by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation (MoSPI) since 2017–18.

Measures employment using three reference periods:

  • Usual Principal Status (UPS) – activity over the past 365 days.
  • Usual Principal & Subsidiary Status (UPSS) – includes secondary activities.
  • Current Weekly Status (CWS) – activity during the last 7 days.

Provides annual data for rural and urban areas; quarterly data for urban areas.

2. NSSO Employment–Unemployment Surveys

  • Conducted quinquennially (every 5 years) and annually before PLFS was introduced.
  • Offered detailed insights into employment patterns using similar reference periods (UPS, UPSS, CWS).
  • Helped track long-term trends in workforce participation and joblessness.

3. Census of India (Decennial Census)

  • Conducted every 10 years by the Registrar General and Census Commissioner.
  • Divides workers into main and marginal categories.
  • Provides data on employment status across geographical and demographic dimensions.

4. Economic Census by the Central Statistics Office (CSO)

  • Conducted periodically to gather data on employment across agricultural and non-agricultural enterprises.
  • Offers enterprise-level employment estimates.

5. Employment Exchange Statistics (EMIP)

  • Part of the Employment Market Information Programme.
  • Provides data on job seekers registered, vacancies notified, and placements made.
  • Covers mostly the organized sector, hence not reflective of informal employment.

6. Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE)

  • A private data agency that conducts the Consumer Pyramids Household Survey (CPHS).
  • Surveys around 200,000 households across India.
  • Provides high-frequency, real-time data on employment, including informal sector trends.
  • Often used for short-term analysis despite concerns over sample representation.

Impacts of Unemployment in India

1. Economic Impacts: 

Under‑utilization of Human Resources

  • A large share of the workforce remains idle, wasting valuable talent and dampening national economic growth  .

Reduced Productivity & Growth

  • High unemployment lowers aggregate productivity and consumption, thereby slowing GDP growth and burdening government finances  .

Rising Poverty & Inequality

  • Joblessness pushes households into poverty, intensifies income inequality, and increases reliance on debt—especially among lower-income and rural populations  .

Fiscal Strain

  • Lower tax revenues and increased social support needs place pressure on government budgets  .

2. Social & Personal Consequences

Mental & Physical Health Problems

  • Unemployment leads to stress, anxiety, depression, loss of self-esteem, insomnia, hypertension, poorer healthcare access, and social isolation  .

Social Disintegration & Crime

  • Desperation fosters antisocial behavior—rising instances of crime, corruption, gambling, substance abuse, vandalism, and even suicide or domestic violence have been linked to joblessness  .

Family Strains

  • Financial hardship and role changes within families can trigger conflict and exacerbate mental health issues  .

3. Labour Market and Industrial Effects

Exploitation & Informality

  • Workers accept subpar wages and unsafe conditions, especially in the informal economy, where labor rights are weak  .

Skill Degradation & Underemployment

  • Long-term unemployment erodes acquired skills, causing inefficiencies and trapping workers in low-quality or part-time roles  .

Industrial Conflicts

  • Joblessness intensifies tensions between employers and workers, leading to strikes and workplace disturbances  .

4. Youth‑Specific Consequences

Wasted Demographic Dividend

  • A significant portion of youth—especially graduates—fail to find suitable jobs, squandering India’s demographic potential  .

“Scarring” Effect

  • Early-career unemployment leads to persistently lower earnings, reduced innovation, social exclusion, and decreased job satisfaction  .

Political & Civic Disillusionment

  • Frustrations among young job-seekers have sparked protests (e.g., smoke-bombing Parliament) and growing distrust in government  .

5. Broader Socio‑Political Consequences

Political Instability & Unrest

  • High unemployment fuels protests, strikes, migration pressures, and voter backlash—especially when government jobs remain unfilled  .

Intergenerational Poverty

  • Continued joblessness perpetuates cycles of poverty, particularly among marginalized castes, fostering systemic inequities and debt bondage  .

Government Initiatives to Tackle Unemployment in India:

1. Job Matching & Career Support

  • National Career Service (NCS): Online platform for job matching, career counselling, skill training, and internships.
  • FutureSkills PRIME: Digital reskilling for youth in AI, cloud, and other tech fields.

2. Rural & Urban Employment Schemes

  • MGNREGA: Guarantees 100 days of rural employment per household.
  • DAY-NULM & NRLM: Promote self-employment, skills, and support for urban and rural poor.
  • DDU-GKY: Skill training and placement for rural youth.

3. Entrepreneurship & Livelihood Support

  • PMEGP: Credit-linked subsidies for starting micro-enterprises.
  • Pradhan Mantri Mudra Yojana (PMMY): Collateral-free loans to MSMEs.
  • Stand-Up India: Loans to SC/ST and women entrepreneurs.

4. Skill Development & Apprenticeship

  • PMKVY: Industry-relevant skill training and certification.
  • National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS): Incentives for employers to train apprentices.
  • PM Vishwakarma Scheme: Toolkit and training for traditional artisans.

5. Industrial & Economic Boost

  • PLI Scheme: Encourages manufacturing and job creation in 14 sectors.
  • Employment-Linked Incentive (ELI) Scheme (2025): ₹1 trillion initiative to generate 35 million jobs with wage subsidies.

6. Education & Institutional Reforms

  • NEP 2020: Integrates vocational training into education.
  • ITI & NSTI Upgradation: Modernizes training infrastructure for 2 million youth.

7. State-Level Initiatives

  • Aizawl Pilot Scheme: Paid apprenticeships for Northeast youth.
  • TN Recruitment Portal (2025): Free portal to connect certified candidates with employers.

Way forward

A. Education Reforms

  • Strong industry-academia collaboration—possibly made mandatory.
  • Institutions must be accountable for placements, not just degrees.
  • Introduce accreditation linked to employment outcomes.

B. Skill Integration

  • Mandatory Idea Labs, Tinker Labs, soft skills, and foreign languages.
  • Focus on humanities integration to build holistic professionals.

C. Global Skilling Outlook

  • Align skilling with demands of ageing foreign economies (e.g., EU, Japan).
  • Leverage projects like EU’s Link4Skills to enable international mobility.

D. Institutional Overhaul

  • Proposal for an Indian Education Services (IES) to bring top talent into education.
  • Invite industry professionals into teaching roles to bridge theory-practice divide.

E. Strengthen Social Safety Nets & Urban Employment

  • Expand employment guarantee schemes like MGNREGA to urban areas and improve social security measures to protect vulnerable populations.

F. Promote Apprenticeships and On-the-Job Training

  • Increase adoption of apprenticeship schemes to provide practical experience and improve workforce readiness.

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