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India stares at a future without jobs

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For well over a decade now, India has been trumpeting its "demographic dividend". When will it actually begin to pay off?


http://www.livemint.com/Opinion/0CgSDkiyz1b5GOQxvag5dI/India-stares-at-a-future-without-jobs.html

India stares at a future without jobs
If consolidation is shrinking job prospects in sectors like telecom, in others like software services and banking, the change is much more structural

A perfect storm is brewing across India’s industrial complex, one that will truly test the country’s demographic dividend. Restructuring in many existing industries is leading to layoffs in thousands while a future in which new projects could be driven largely by automation and robots could put paid to the aspirations of millions of young men and women readying to join the workforce every year.

Simply put, we could be looking at a future in which there are just no new jobs.

As it is, investment proposals have been coming down while the latest numbers from the Reserve Bank of India show that manufacturing contracted for the first time in seven years, from a growth rate of 12.9% in 2009-10 to -3.7% in 2015-16. So far, the focus has been on injecting fresh capital investment under the assumption that this will automatically lead to job creation. But it is increasingly clear, that correlation is tenuous.

According to estimates by International Labour Organization (ILO), India’s employment elasticity, a common measure of how employment growth responds to GDP growth, hovered around 0.3 between 1991 and 2007. Basically, 1% of overall economic growth produced 0.3% of employment growth. That number has been coming down quite alarmingly since, and now stands at only about 0.15%.

Facing uncertain markets at home and abroad and saddled with low capacity utilization, most large Indian companies have been loath to invest in fresh capacities. Even in sectors where there has been fresh investment, net job creation has been negative. Thus, the $25 billion investment by Reliance Industries Ltd in its telecom operation Jio, hasn’t added to the overall number of jobs in the sector as the incumbents have been forced to restructure their operations to trim costs.

Looking ahead, there could be more layoffs coming as the fallout of Telenor India’s sale to Bharti Airtel and the impending merger of Idea Cellular with Vodafone’s India unit, take effect.

If consolidation is shrinking job prospects in sectors like telecom, in others like software services as well as banking, the change is much more structural. Artificial intelligence and machine coding along with a shift away from outsourcing by large US-based companies, have dimmed the prospects of Indian software firms forcing industry body Nasscom to defer its annual revenue forecast for the first time ever. Banking is going through a similar churn and layoffs have been a regular feature over the last two years.

Sadly, start-ups which were expected to pick up the slack in job creation stemming from changes in these sectors, are themselves in the doldrums now. In recent months, hundreds of people have been laid off in the consumer internet space and with venture capital firms taking a jaundiced view of keeping the funding spigot open. According to an analysis by Techcircle over 10,000 people have lost their jobs in the Indian startup ecosystem since August 2015.

Unfortunately, there is no end in sight to this trend. Even when the investment cycle in fresh manufacturing resumes, it is unlikely that it will be manpower intensive. Automation is driving shop floors across the world with robots replacing workers in the ratio of 1:7. Nor is this restricted to developed markets. In India, sales of robots for factories are increasing at a rapid pace with companies like Grey Orange which build them virtually reshaping the logistics industry.

The problem, of course, is that sectors that were traditionally large employers particularly at the blue- collar level, have also altered irrevocably. Thus, mining, once a mass employer, has undergone a comprehensive change with traditional small-scale and public sector mining being systematically replaced with large-scale, privately-owned mines that are hugely mechanised. According to Central Statistics Office (CSO) estimates, in 1994–95, 25 employees were needed to produce minerals worth Rs1 crore. By 2003–04, that number had fallen to just eight employees. The result has been a steady dip in the employment numbers in that sector even while production numbers have gone up. What’s worse, estimates point to a further fall in the employment potential of the sector.

One fall-out of the uncertain jobs situation has been the increased incidence of what are dubbed “non-standard forms of employment”, such as contract labour as well as part-time work. These place employees in a potentially vulnerable state, besides denying them legitimate benefits.

In such a scenario where jobs are scarce, social security in the form of unemployment benefits becomes the only way to maintain stability. But as the example of Punjab shows us, having money without work can be a lethal cocktail.
 
Course correction is done by every major economy for higher GDP growth. When the course correction is done then there would be lots of jobs.
 
More n more indians are born, but jobs are getting lesser n lesser.

That has nv been the way how things work.

Indians are not too intelligent to have realised this. While India has scarce industrial manufacturing capability, she has a bustling critical mass of baby-making factories, whereby her citizens spend their free time doing nothing useful to the nation's development, but producing babies after babies.

Ppl like @Bussard Ramjet who has been preaching on how India has a ever-increasing source of massive human resource capital, needs to go out n see the society of advanced nations.
 
But that certainly does not mean we will discontinue taking Chinese refugees in, so Chinese posters here need not worry. You will be given food, clothing and shelter here like your fellow Chinese citizens.
 
Its a serious issue as India has largest youth population. Producing jobs is always tough. We need comprehensive programs to tackle this issue.
 
The article misses the forest for the trees.

While jobs growth, ie formal employment, has not been as good, even 0.15% for every 1% of economic growth translates to the creation of 4 million jobs per year, self employment has been increasing steadily.

But Chinese members here need to realize that it's worse in China.
 
Those actually interested on the issues can watch this:


The labour statistics needs an overhaul, median company size is 2 but job creation is only sampled at 10+ employee companies (NITI aayog is working on addressing that with the NSSO). There is a broad based job creation happening outside what is captured by the current surveying. Higher productivity and less under-employment are the more important issues than creating raw jobs per se.
 
Demographic dividend :enjoy:
@Bussard Ramjet

More n more indians are born, but jobs are getting lesser n lesser.

That has nv been the way how things work.

Indians are not too intelligent to have realised this. While India has scarce industrial manufacturing capability, she has a bustling critical mass of baby-making factories, whereby her citizens spend their free time doing nothing useful to the nation's development, but producing babies after babies.

Ppl like @Bussard Ramjet who has been preaching on how India has a ever-increasing source of massive human resource capital, needs to go out n see the society of advanced nations.

that's what happens when you reproduce like cockroaches

India is hopeless.
Politicians there are obsessed with internal wars instead of jobs.
PDF RSSers here never care about those Hindu who cannot speak English and come from low caste.

Get a life, losers.
 
I have been trying to explain to Bussard when he posted about Japan's coffin industry. For the sake of mankind, ever growing population is disastrous to planet earth. Aging population does not mean dying country, it means the country will reduce their population to a correct equilibrium. With less people, the government can provide better services in child care, thereby maintaining the population at a certain band. I believe this is what Chinese government is trying to achieve, a population band within 500-800 million fluctuating in decades through government policies.

True that!...Course correction will done like always..In the meantime news from 2016....
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...-data-china-grapples-with-hidden-unemployment
Precisely why having an ever growing population is not a good idea. Even China with their large job creating machine cannot cope with the increasing work force, let alone India. And if you read the article properly, it talks about underemployment, where struggling firms are keeping zombie workers for the sake of social security, what you don't realize is China has a serious labor shortage problem, it's a matter of whether these zombies are willing to relocate to those jobs.
 
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I have been trying to explain to Bussard when he posted about Japan's coffin industry. For the sake of mankind, ever growing population is disastrous to planet earth. Aging population does not mean dying country, it means the country will reduce their population to a correct equilibrium. With less people, the government can provide better services in child care, thereby maintaining the population at a certain band. I believe this is what Chinese government is trying to achieve, a population band within 500-800 million fluctuating in decades through government policies.


Precisely why having an ever growing population is not a good idea. Even China with their large job creating machine cannot cope with the increasing work force, let alone India. And if you read the article properly, it talks about underemployment, where struggling firms are keeping zombie workers for the sake of social security, what you don't realize is China has a serious labor shortage problem, it's a matter of whether these zombies are willing to relocate to those jobs.

I agree reducing population is an imperative
 

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