INDIA EMPLOYMENT REPORT 2024 - REPORTS & INDICES News: Jobs outlook bleak: On the ‘The India Employment Report 2024’

INDIA
EMPLOYMENT REPORT 2024 - REPORTS & INDICES

News:
Jobs outlook bleak: On
the ‘The India Employment Report 2024’

 

What's
in the news?

      
A recent report that focused on the
current status and outlook for youth employment in India paints a grim picture
of the country’s widely touted ‘demographic
dividend’
, which appears set to waste away unless there are immediate and
targeted policy interventions.

 

Key
takeaways:

      
It posits a bleak outlook for the
approximately 7-8 million young people
being added to the labour force each year, with youth accounting for almost 83%
of India’s unemployed workforce.

 

India
Employment Report 2024:

Prepared
by:

      
The Institute
for Human Development
in collaboration with the International Labour
Organization (ILO).

 

Objective:

      
It highlights the challenges of youth employment within India’s evolving economic, labour
market, educational and skills landscapes.

 

Data:

      
This report has used the data analysis
from the National Sample Surveys and the Periodic Labour Force Surveys between
2000 and 2022.

 

Key
Findings of the Report:

      
There has been an increase in female labour market participation rates since 2019,
especially in rural areas.

      
There has also been a gradual shift in the workforce from agricultural to non-farm sectors.

      
There has been a predominance of self-employment and casual employment, with nearly
82% of workers in the informal sector.

      
A modest
rise in the wages of casual labourers
between 2012 and 2022 has been
observed while real wages for regular workers have stagnated or declined.

      
India is expected to have a migration rate of around 40 percent in 2030
and will have an urban population of around 607 million.

 

Challenges
Highlighted by the Report:

      
Almost
90% of workers remain engaged in informal work.

      
There has been a rise in contractualization. There is only a small percentage of
regular workers covered by long-term contracts. The share of regular work
increased steadily after 2000 which declined after 2018.

      
There are widespread livelihood insecurities with only a small percentage being covered
with social protection measures, precisely in the non-agriculture, organized
sector.

      
India’s large young workforce is a
demographic dividend, but they don’t appear to have the skills to deliver with
75% of youth unable to send emails with attachments, 60% unable to copy and
paste files, and 90% unable to put a mathematical formula into a spreadsheet.

 

Suggestions
by the India Employment Report 2024
:

The India Employment
Report 2024 recommends five key policy areas for youth in India such as

      
Including job creation

      
Improving employment quality

      
Addressing labour market inequalities

      
Strengthening skills and active labour
market policies

















































































      
Bridging knowledge gaps on labour market
patterns and youth employment.