VOA  / Voice of America  Blog
 
October 26, 2016
 
 
Despite  Fast-Growing Economy, India Struggles to Create Jobs

By:  Anjana Pasricha
 
 
NEW DELHI  —   
India’s main Hindu festival of lights is just days  away, but there is 
little cheer for 35-year-old Kali Charan. For a week, the  daily-wage laborer 
has hung on the side of a busy street intersection in the  business hub of 
Gurgaon hoping that building contractors or home owners will  stop by to seek 
his services. 
He is not alone. This is the spot where scores of  other unemployed 
laborers gather daily in search of work as masons, carpenters,  painters and 
plumbers. 
But Kali Charan is finding far less work than he  did eight years ago when 
he migrated from his village. “I get work only for ten  or fifteen days a 
month,” he said despondently. “I try to manage in as little as  possible to 
save a few dollars to send home to my village.” 
His woes are not surprising. In the last decade,  as Gurgaon boomed, 
massive construction projects created tens of thousands of  jobs making it a 
hotspot for migrant labor. 
But many projects have been stalled due to a  slowdown in demand. The 
situation is no different in other parts of the  country. 
Construction is not the only labor-intensive  sector to be struggling. 
Factories making garments, leather products and other  goods for export are 
also 
facing tough times due to the global  slowdown. 
Economist Rajiv Kumar at New Delhi’s Center for  Policy Research said the 
export industry was a massive job creator, but “they  (exports) have been 
declining for continuous 18 months, sector after  sector.” 
Surveys have shown that thousands of jobs were  lost in factories making 
garments, leather goods and other products for exports  in last year. 
A recent survey by the government’s Labor Bureau  says the unemployment 
rate rose to a five-year high of five percent. 
It is a surprising statistic for an economy that  outpaced China to grow at 
more than seven per cent last year. But economists say  India is 
experiencing what they call “jobless growth.” 
“Growth is there, but it is taking place in those  sectors where capital 
intensity is higher, but where labor absorption is not  much. So our 
prediction that the modern, globalized sector would be able to  provide 
employment is 
not happening,” said Amitabh Kundu, former professor at  Jawaharlal Nehru 
University. 
That is not good news for India, the country with  the world’s largest 
population of those under 25. One million people are added  to the workforce 
every year. 
The failure to add employment opportunities for  these young people poses a 
huge challenge for Prime Minister Narendra Modi,  whose promise to create 
millions of new jobs catapulted him to power in  2014. 
It has been a key focus of his government since he  took office. The 
government has launched a “Make in India” program and  liberalized foreign 
investment rules to woo investors with an eye on expanding  manufacturing and 
employing millions moving out of agriculture. 
Some investment has come, but there are no signs  that India will be able 
to emulate China’s success in manufacturing. 
Modern factories are also unlikely to create jobs  on the scale witnessed 
some years ago. “In the large corporate sector, because  of ongoing 
automation or call it robotization, companies are tending to replace  labor 
with 
machines,” points out economist Kumar. 
The government has taken other initiatives to  create jobs. It has promised 
loans to small and medium sized businesses, which  are more labor 
intensive, and has started a $1.5 billion fund to encourage  start-ups. 
But will that be enough? In its Asia-Pacific Human  Development Report this 
year, the United Nations Development warned India faces  a huge challenge 
of finding jobs in the next 35 years for the 280 million people  that will 
enter the job market. 
On the ground, that is not hard to see.  Seventeen-year-old Nikhil Singh in 
Gurgaon comes in search of work every day  after he quit school after grade 
nine. “I come here because we need money at  home. Sometimes I get work, 
sometimes I don’t,” he said. 
An older man shrugged in resignation – he does not  need a study to tell 
him that the swelling ranks of job seekers are a threat to  his livelihood. “
When our numbers have increased, work will decrease, wont it?”  he said. 
Political analysts say while Prime Minister Modi  is widely credited with 
rejuvenating the economy and making India more open for  business, his key 
test lies in finding ways to revive the job market. 
Head of New Delhi’s Center of Developing  Societies, Sanjay Kumar, points 
out that the lack of jobs could test the  popularity of the ruling Bharatiya 
Janata Party (BJP). “Lok Sabha (parliament)  elections are at a distance, at 
least two and a half years away. Things might  improve, but if we go by the 
same trend which we find now, this is [an] alarm  bell for [the] BJP.” 
Finding enough work for India’s young population  is a daunting task, said 
economist Kumar. “Huge is an understatement, can’t find  the word, 
gigantic, gargantuan, whatever, very, very  challenging.”

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