Santosh Mehrotra, Centre for Informal Sector and Labour Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
Jajati Parida, Department of Economic Studies, Central University Punjab, Bathinda
Falling total employment is an unprecedented trend seen from 2011-12 to 2017-18. Due to a decline of employment in agriculture and manufacturing and slow growth of construction jobs, the process of structural transformation, which had gained momentum post-2004-5, has stalled since 2012. Mounting educated youth unemployment, and lack of quality non-farm jobs have resulted in an increase of the disheartened labour force. Though the share of regular and formal employment increased marginally due to growth of formal jobs in the private sectors, the share of informal jobs within government/ public sector increased. A dominant share of jobs is still generated by micro and small units of the unorganized sectors without any formal or written job contract. In both government and private sectors the number of contract jobs (with less than a year’s contract) is on the rise post 2011-12. Not surprisingly, real wages have not increased in either rural or urban areas.
Suggested Citation:
Mehrotra, Santosh and Jajati Parida.2019. “India’s Employment Crisis: Rising Education Levels and Falling Non-agricultural Job Growth.” Centre for Sustainable Employment Working Paper#23, Azim Premji University ,Bangalore .