Paul Walters

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Fresh Out of College? Ok, Now it's Time to Get a Job.

Fresh Out of College? Ok, Now it's Time to Get a Job.


Consider this if you will:

You are a young, presentable, bright twenty- three - year old with a brand new degree from a reputable university. You have worked diligently over four years, achieved excellent grades and now you are ready to enter the workforce. Except, there is a small but a rather fundamental problem;

You live in India!


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It is estimated that within the next three years India’s labour force will overtake China as the world’s largest, but right now the country is struggling to generate opportunities for an ever-growing workforce. India is suffering from a number of economic malaise ’s; slow growth, a steady decline in investment rates, chaotic economic reforms, an accelerating fall off in agricultural employment and an archaic education system that have all combined to reduce the proportion of Indians who hold proper jobs.


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The country is experiencing a dramatic demographic shift, as birth rates have, over the last decade been steadily falling. Today, the share of the population that is of working age has reached its peak relative to the share of children and old people. One would have thought that as long as jobs are available it would begin to lift the rate of economic growth that it so desperately needs. However, the proportion of working-age people actually in work has been falling steadily in a country that is home to a sixth of all humanity.


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So, what’s causing this dramatic fall off when it comes to employment opportunities?

On the outskirts of Lucknow, the capital of India’s most populous state, Uttar Pradesh is a medium-sized factory, one of the thousands of small factories that populate a massive, industrial estate. The factory is a family run business that bags and packages herbal teas. Since the mid -2000’s, the owners have been investing in new technology enabling the company to boost output fivefold with no increase in staffing levels. 


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That self- same company recently took delivery of several new and improved machines which require only a single operator, meaning that up to ten factory floor workers will lose their jobs once the new machines have been installed. This industrial, or technology revolution is happening across the entire subcontinent. A recent report by McKinsey predicted that new technology could eliminate some 52% of India’s jobs if factories like the one in Lucknow adopt the same principles.

In India’s high-flying IT industry in cities such as Bangalore the last year has seen thousands of workers laid off as new technology and increased automation makes a top-heavy workforce largely redundant.


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The story doesn’t really get any better when reading The Economic Times of India who recently conducted a nationwide poll and found that 62% of the country’s workforce felt that their jobs were under threat.

When you are dealing with a population of 1.3 billion the job numbers, or lack of are more than daunting when just to keep unemployment at ‘acceptable’ levels, India needs to create some 10m-12m jobs a year!

The government’s data on jobs and job creation is pretty vague as I found when searching online for believable information. It seems that for many years the jobless rate hovered at an enviable 4% but,

like all governments everywhere they are often generous in their definition of what constitutes full-time employment. In 2015 (The most recent study) found that 35% of workers had held a job for less than 11 months. The World Bank in 2017 estimated that over 30% of Indians between the ages of 15 and 29 are NEETs, “not in education, employment or training”.

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This frightening figure, however, needs to be treated with caution and a giant pinch of salt as some 86% of workers are reckoned to be in “informal” employment, meaning they are untaxed and without an employment contract.! It would appear that reliable counting and data collection across this vast country is somewhat of a difficult task.


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However, even with these lofty and sometimes flawed surveys by outside sources, there is no doubt that the pressure for jobs is real. An example of how unemployment is causing tremendous angst, just last year, many thousands of Jats, a community in northern India who are traditional subsistence small farmers found themselves becoming increasingly urbanised. The upshot was a series of violent riots to press their demands for an expanded quota of government jobs. The result was 25 dead and hundreds severely injured as the rioters took drastic measures when they severed the main water supply to Delhi, India’s capital.


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Employment is a constant and ongoing headache for the current government and, for the governments that came before them. The problem often leads to ill thought out schemes that are poorly executed. A recent, massive state program, the world’s largest, created millions of temporary make-work jobs in rural areas that naturally proved to be unsustainable. Another was the creation of a National Skill Development Program whereby some 600,000 workers were trained in various skills and yet at the end of the training period just 12% found jobs.

India also has some of the most complex labour laws on earth with over 44 different labour statutes at the national level and goodness knows how many at the state level.


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Currently, in many states, Companies employing over 100 employees must seek government approval to fire a single worker. Naturally, firms turn to contract workers to avoid the stifling red tape but this leads to a rather unhappy workforce. Another way that companies avoid the onerous labour laws is to stay small. A recent estimate put the number of firms with less than ten workers at a staggering 98%

With statistics such as these, it is no wonder that India is struggling to maintain growth and raise productivity. The garment industry, for instance, is populated by hundreds of thousands of tiny cottage type factories while their neighbours in Bangladesh and Vietnam have vast factories supplying an ever-increasing global demand, meaning that their garment industries have left India in their wake.

It is not all doom and gloom however as some of India’s biggest industrial firms have found the odd solution. Large factories in India. are more capital-intensive than those of their counterparts in China. In Chennai, Hyundai, a South Korean firm has some 8,500 workers who toil alongside 530 robots. This fully digitised facility turned out 661,000 cars last year, or one every 72 seconds. It ranks second in productivity among the firm’s 34 factories around the world; As Ganesh Mani, the vice president for production put it,“ Here is an integrated cascade between suppliers and the assembly line, meaning that the entire ecosystem is in sync.”


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What inspired this article was an advertisement I came across for Indian Railways who are looking to hire 100,000 workers across the network, starting in January. Potential applicants had to apply online and then report to various centres around the country to sit an examination to prove their eligibility. All well and good except a staggering 22 million applications were received inside a week!


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The government has to do more to boost growth or the jobs crunch will grow ever more severe. The problem has to begin at a grassroots level and, not just tinkering at the edges but starting with the woefully underfunded and poorly run schools, to fixing a hopelessly clogged legal system and untying that stifling red tape, and then perhaps the county’s infrastructure and ecosystem will indeed be “in sync”.

Paul v Walters is the best selling author of several novels and, when not cocooned in sloth and procrastination in his house in Bali he scribbles for a number of international travel and Vox Pop journals.


Komentar

Lada 🏡 Prkic

5 tahun yang lalu #20

Paul, what to say on such staggering stats you've presented. In contrary to Jerry's opinion I think that the government is the solution to the unemployment problem in India as a major social issue. The government is responsible for the defective and low-quality education system. You've mentioned a National Skill Development Program that failed. No skill development programme can succeed without an underlying foundation of basic and primary education.

Gert Scholtz

5 tahun yang lalu #19

Paul Walters As a smaller example - I read once that India has 1,5 Million engineers and 3 million MBA's per year entering the workforce. That is an enormous number. I can only imagine the difficulty of creating an economy that can absorb all these and other graduates. Excellent article Paul - well researched and topical!

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #18

Gert Scholtz . This piece I thought might appeal to you

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #17

#9
Ken Boddie Nah...no jokes on this serious subject, however, what I do encourage you to write about...the Bunnings "snag" disaster. If anything will drive me back to Oz its the thought of visiting a Bunnings store on a Saturday morning and grabbing one of those cardiac inducing sausages in the obligatory white bread smothered in onions. I see our health and safety nazis have decreed that the onions should be on the bottom and the snag on top. Onions not placed correctly could result in spillage leading to a member of the public slipping and damaging themselves. These are lofty and serious issues we face my friend and makes the Indian unemployment saga pale into insignificance. !!!!

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #16

#13
Praveen Raj Gullepalli . Oh dear, that was a bit of a sad diatribe however as mentioned, as a fairly regular visitor to India, I do see Hope! After all, they don't call it "Amazing India" for nothing

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #15

#10
Phil Friedman . Thanks Phil , as always enlightened comments coupled with your normal caustic wit !

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #14

Lada \ud83c\udfe1 Prkic I thought this piece might appeal to you

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #13

Timothy welch . Some interesting questions but I have no answers to them. I have a good friend in Delhi who is a judge and he tells me that even with major crimes such as high-level fraud and even capital crimes can take up to 20 years to come to trial given that the courts are clogged and there is a vast shortage of judges! So I think we can all agree ...there is a problem.

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #12

#15
Jerry Fletcher Thaks Jerry, food for thought.

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #11

#16
Clau Valerio Thank you Clau I'm flattered as always

Jerry Fletcher

5 tahun yang lalu #10

Paul, Thanks for the insight. It is perhaps time, in my view, for all the citizens of the earth to move away from the idea that government is the solution to all our ills. Government is incompetent just about anywhere we cast our gaze. Is it possible that Mother Earth, sensing the problem has stimulated the imposition of Tyrants everywhere we turn? I know that sounds mystical but it fits the observed phenomena.

Debasish Majumder

5 tahun yang lalu #9

this buzz has aptly narrated the miserable state of workforce in India. addressed the shooting problem with due gravity. enjoyed read and shared. thank you very much for the buzz Paul Walters

Phil Friedman

5 tahun yang lalu #8

Paul Walters, this piece brings perspective to what may be an unsolvable problem. Without giving in to ethnicism or racism, I have to wonder whether certain features of India's predominant history and culture (in the wake of British Imperialism) may saddle it with problems for centuries, not decades to come. Not to mention, make it a target for the Robber Barons of "Globalization". Thanks for stirring the pot. And cheers!

Ken Boddie

5 tahun yang lalu #7

Hey, Pak Paul, your stats are an eye opener and rather depressing. We have a similar but very much smaller problem here in Oz due to government legislation making it harder to get rid of employees, resulting in small business growth being stifled. I’d really like to lift the mood with some subtle and cheerful jokes about unemployed Indians, but I just can’t see them working.

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #6

#5
Praveen Raj Gullepalli . many thanks for taking the time to read my post. I am merely an 'outside' observer making comment on the country from my all too brief visits to India and relying on reports and research by supposedly competent people. China indeed !!

Pascal Derrien

5 tahun yang lalu #5

Multinationals sub contracting heavy parts of their operations in India will have no hesitation in packing up when technology will allow them to load off their P&L.... its an economic time bomb from a GDP and domestic economy perspective

Randall Burns

5 tahun yang lalu #4

Eye opening buzz Paul Walters The numbers are staggering actually, I don't even know where to begin to try and trouble-shoot/problem-solve this...

CityVP Manjit

5 tahun yang lalu #3

I only had time tonight to skim the buzz but immediately it provoked my mind to think about the lack of job growth in the Indian state of Kerela and how that state managed to improve education and healthcare only for this progress to be undermined by a lack of jobs https://www.jstor.org/stable/4407154?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents I will read the buzz on Thursday - am preparing for a presentation tomorrow - look forward to reading the buzz fully on Thursday.

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #2

Stephanie Brookes

Paul Walters

5 tahun yang lalu #1

Phil Friedman

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