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Today's Paper | December 19, 2024

Published 26 May, 2019 11:35am

As Modi keeps his job, Indians worry about theirs

Asad Ahmed, one of about 1.2 million young Indians entering the cutthroat job market each month, diligently scribbles notes at a computer class in New Delhi.

While nationalist Prime Minister Narendra Modi won a new five-year term promising to step up his campaign for a “new India”, 18-year-old Ahmed is pessimistic about getting a new job.

“There are so many people in Delhi and the competition is intense,” said Ahmed, dressed like the other students in a black-and-white uniform at the three-month community course run in a police station in Old Delhi.

“I know this stint may not be enough for me to get a job but I am trying my best.”

Indian youths attending a class on retail sales at a training centre run by the National Skill Development Corporation. ─ AFP

Modi came to power in 2014 promising jobs, but delivering on that has been a challenge.

And as soon as the election euphoria settles, Modi's government will have to find ways to boost investment and revive manufacturing to create new jobs.

Like Ahmed, most of the other 60 students at the government-sponsored “skill development” classes at the Old Delhi police station, all from poor families, were also apprehensive.

Nudrat Akram, 19, signed up for the course because her family could not afford to pay for higher education.

“I want a job in the retail sector where I can earn 10,000 rupees ($143) a month,” Akram said, as she practised speaking English with pretend customers.

More jobs, more debt

India's conservative prime minister came to power in 2014 on a pro-business platform, promising to create 10 million jobs a year.

The world's fastest-growing major economy has grown about 7 per cent a year since, but jobs have been elusive. The promise was barely mentioned in Modi's triumphant re-election campaign.

Indian youths at a class for a three-month course on computer hardware at a training centre. ─ AFP

Nearly two-thirds of India's 1.3 billion population are of working age, between 15 and 64, but an increasing number are in the unemployed list.

No official data has been released for more than two years but a recent leaked report ─ denied by the government ─ put the unemployment rate at a 45-year high of 6.1pc.

The Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, a private research firm, estimates the jobless rate rose to 7.6pc in April.

“The economy is going to be a huge problem. The government simply cannot create jobs for millions entering the workforce,” said political analyst Parsa Venkateshwar Rao.

“Modi will rely on businesses but they are also struggling so he has a real problem on his hands.”

'Not easy to survive'

Unemployment is particularly dire for women.

A Deloitte consultancy report in March said female labour force participation fell to 26pc in 2018 from 36pc in 2005 because of poor education and socio-economic barriers.

The manifesto of Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) promised a $1.4-trillion infrastructure boost to create jobs if it won the election. It offered metro trains for 50 cities and to double the national highway network.

But analysts say the government, which has drastically increased its debt over the past five years, will have to borrow huge new amounts to pay for the works.

In 2015, Modi launched a Skill India programme aiming to train 500 million people by 2022. But the results have been mixed. According to 2018 data, only a quarter of people who joined the scheme found jobs.

Indian youths at a class for a three-month course on computer hardware. ─ AFP

“The Skill India mission has not had as much success as, say, the highway programme,” said economist Arvind Virmani. “The real crisis is about job skills and basic education.”

India's rural jobs guarantee programme offers work to about 70 million people at a minimum wage for 100 days a year, but there is no equivalent for the growing numbers of urban youth.

Experts say the government must consider an urban employment guarantee scheme in order to reap the true benefit of its economic growth.

At the Delhi classes, 18-year-old Sehar, who uses one name, is worried about helping her poor family, including four younger sisters.

Her father, who works at a hospital, is the only earner. “I am the eldest and I want to help my family, it's not easy to survive in this city.”

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