Employment: Nature, Quality & Government Initiatives

Master this topic with zero to advance depth.

Employment: Nature, Quality & Government Initiatives

1. Nature of Employment: Rural vs. Urban

Rural Employment: ~70% of India's workforce is engaged in rural areas. Dominated by agriculture and allied activities (farming, fishing, forestry, animal husbandry). Characterized by seasonality тАФ peak labor demand during sowing and harvesting; slack seasons (months of disguised unemployment). Casual daily wage labor dominates; social security is extremely rare. Rural non-farm employment (construction, trade, small manufacturing) has been growing. Urban Employment: Concentrated in manufacturing, trade, transport, finance, real estate, public administration. Higher wages on average. More formal establishments. However, urban informal workers (street vendors, domestic workers, construction workers) form a large and vulnerable group.

2. Formal vs. Informal Employment

Formal Employment: Workers with a written contract, job security, social security benefits (Provident Fund, ESI, Gratuity, Pension), and regulatory protection. Found in organized sector establishments. ~10% of India's total workforce. Informal Employment: No written contract, job security, or social security. Can exist even within formal enterprises (contract workers). ~90% of India's workforce is informal. The ILO estimates India has one of the world's largest informal economies. Informalisation Trend: Even post-liberalization, formal job growth has been disappointing. Companies prefer contract/casual workers to avoid permanent employment obligations. EPFO (Employees' Provident Fund Organisation) data shows formal payroll addition, but baseline was vastly undercounted.

3. Key Labour Market Terms

Working Age Population (WAP): Population aged 15-59 years (or 15-64). India's WAP is ~900 million тАФ a demographic asset. Labour Force (LF): Those employed + those seeking work. Does not include students, homemakers, retired unless they seek work. Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR): LFPR = (Labour Force / WAP) ├Ч 100. India's LFPR is low at ~40-42% (PLFS data), especially female LFPR (~25%), significantly below global average. Worker Population Ratio (WPR): Workers / WAP. Similar to employment rate. Unemployment Rate (UR): Unemployed / Labour Force ├Ч 100. Does not capture underemployment or disguised unemployment. Usual Principal and Subsidiary Status (UPSS): NSSO methodology тАФ a person is worker if employed for major part of the year. Current Daily Status (CDS): NSSO methodology тАФ captures each day's employment status; best for measuring underemployment.

4. Sectoral Distribution of Employment

Primary Sector (Agriculture & allied): ~44% of workforce but contributes only ~15-17% of GDP тАФ low productivity, structural transformation needed. Secondary Sector (Industry, Manufacturing): ~25% workforce. India's manufacturing employment share (~12-13%) is low compared to East Asian peers who used manufacturing as an employment escalator. Tertiary Sector (Services): ~31% workforce but ~55% of GDP. High productivity but services like IT are capital-intensive and high-skill тАФ cannot absorb large unskilled labour. Lewis Dual Sector Model: Surplus labour from traditional (agricultural) sector shifts to modern (industrial) sector, raising wages and productivity. India's structural transformation is incomplete and slower than expected.

5. Quality of Employment

Decent Work: ILO's concept тАФ productive work with fair income, security, social protection, and dignity. India lacks decent work for most of its workforce. Underemployment: Workers are employed but below their capacity, willingness, or qualifications. Widespread in agriculture (disguised unemployment) and informal services. Disguised Unemployment: More workers engaged in a task than productively required; marginal product of labour is near zero. Common in Indian agriculture. Educated Unemployment: Graduates and post-graduates unable to find jobs commensurate with their qualifications тАФ a major issue in India. Contractualisation: Rise in short-term, contractual employment replacing permanent employment тАФ reduces job security and social security.

6. Causes of Lack of Employment

  • Slow Manufacturing Growth: India's share of manufacturing in GDP (~16%) is low; East Asian countries industrialized via manufacturing.
  • Capital-Intensive Technology Bias: Both private investment and FDI tend toward capital-intensive, high-tech production.
  • Inefficient Land and Labour Markets: Rigid labour laws historically discouraged formal hiring (CLRA, Industrial Disputes Act).
  • Low Agricultural Productivity: Keeps surplus labour trapped in subsistence farming.
  • Mismatch in Education System: Produces graduates ill-suited for industry needs (ASER reports, CII skill gap surveys).
  • Slow Urbanization: Low urban employment density compared to China and Southeast Asian peers.
  • COVID-19 Impact: Massive job losses in contact-intensive services (hospitality, retail, transport) and informal sector.

7. Restructuring of Workforce

Gig Economy: Platform workers (Ola, Uber, Swiggy, Zomato drivers, Dunzo delivery) are a rapidly growing category. No formal employment relationship; high flexibility but zero social security. Code on Social Security 2020 attempts to extend ESI and PF to gig workers. Work from Home (WFH): COVID-19 accelerated WFH adoption. Has implications for urban real estate, commuting, work-life balance, and gender equity (as women can work from home while managing household duties). Automation Threat: AI and robotics threatening low-skill jobs in manufacturing, BPO, and logistics. India must upskill its workforce for the automation era. Codes on Labour (2019-20): Four Labour Codes тАФ Wage Code, Industrial Relations Code, Occupational Safety Code, Social Security Code тАФ consolidate 44 central labour laws. Aim: reduce compliance burden, improve ease of doing business while extending protections.

8. Government Initiatives for Generating Employment

MGNREGS (Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme): Guarantees 100 days of unskilled manual labour per household per year at minimum wage. World's largest employment guarantee program. Acted as automatic stabilizer during COVID-19 (demand surged to 300+ crore person-days). PM-KISAN Samman Nidhi: Income support to farmers тАФ indirect employment stabilization. PM Employment Generation Programme (PMEGP): Credit-linked subsidy for MSMEs in non-farm sector. PM SVANidhi: Collateral-free working capital loans to street vendors (COVID-19 recovery). Startup India: Ecosystem for new ventures тАФ fund of funds, tax exemptions, easier compliance. Skill India Mission / PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY): Short-term skill training across 40+ sectors for youth. Pradhan Mantri Rojgar Protsahan Yojana (PMRPY): Employer incentive тАФ government pays EPF contribution for new hires to encourage formal employment. Make in India / PLI Schemes: Production Linked Incentives across 14 sectors (mobile phones, pharmaceuticals, textiles, food processing) to boost manufacturing employment. NRLM (National Rural Livelihood Mission) / DAY-NRLM: Women's Self Help Groups (SHGs) linked to credit and livelihood activities in rural areas. Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme: Incentivizes companies to hire apprentices, bridging education-industry gap.