Try GOLD - Free
Staring at Jobs Loss, and Driverless Cars
Hardnews
|November 2016
Every month, a million young Indians become ready to join the industrial workforce. Who can generate enough jobs?
A FEW WEEKS ago, a Delhi-based business daily scooped a story about how the centre, worried by the increased demand for rural jobs due to drought conditions, had told state governments to stop generating more jobs under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS). In its wisdom, it had used a popular messaging site, Whatsapp, for the communication, which was probably how the news leaked out.
Although the ministry of rural development vehemently denied the report, it is well known that the government has little regard for this 10-year-old programme, which has created 19.84 billion person days of employment benefitting 276 million workers.
The disregard for MGNREGS is inconsistent with the dismal job scenario in the country, especially as a pathetic number of jobs has been added since the NDA government came to power in 2014, riding on its promise to provide jobs for millions of youth. The figures are not just discouraging, but utterly crushing. In 2015 only 1.5 lakh jobs were added, compared to 11 lakh jobs in 2011.
These figures have to be seen in the context of the number of unemployed people that are added every month. India adds a million people every month to the industrial workforce and needs to create 115 million non-farm jobs over the next 10 years to ensure the country is able to reap demographic dividends. This is admittedly a humongous task and the impossibility of achieving even 10 percent of this target is staring at the government.
This story is from the November 2016 edition of Hardnews.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Hardnews
Hardnews
Net Neutrality and an Open Internet
In recent years, the campaign to maintain citizen's right to the Internet - and protect them from practices that would benefit only a few - has become firece and noisy.
5 mins
August 2015
Hardnews
Come and See The Blood In The Streets
Incidents of violence targetting the minorities have become routine in the last 16 months. Prime Minister Modis government has done little to shun the belief that the culprits dont enjoy its patronage.
7 mins
October 2015
Hardnews
The Gates of Memory: Two Hundred Years Of Silence
People take part in a ceremony at the monument "The Gates of Memory"near the village of Trostenets.
5 mins
October 2015
Hardnews
Digital Taxi Aggregators: Driving Past Caste
Application-based cab aggregators have disrupted old business models. Hiring drivers was once the preserve of old taxi stands who relied on various forms of kinship such as regionalism and caste.
3 mins
October 2015
Hardnews
For Fear of Finding Something Worse
If Hillary Clinton does manage to get elected, it will be because enough voters can’t endure the idea or the reality of dictator Donald Trump.
8 mins
August 2016
Hardnews
GST Will Not Change India
It would be foolish to deny the benefits of the landmark legislation for the business community and in terms of administrative streamlining, but more foolish still is the notion that it is going to radically change India’s growth story.
9 mins
SEPTEMBER 2016
Hardnews
The Countryside Is Burning
A lack of jobs and an abundant workforce have meant that the agrarian states of India have become tinderboxes waiting to catch fire.
11 mins
OCTOBER 2016
Hardnews
How Big Is The Black Money Catch?
There are many questions which remain unanswered despite the announcement of a massive ₹65,000 crore being supposedly declared by tax evaders across the country.
5 mins
OCTOBER 2016
Hardnews
The Making Of A Hard State
By ratcheting up nationalistic sentiments to a fever pitch, the BJP is trying to reap political dividends.
12 mins
OCTOBER 2016
Hardnews
The Trump-Clinton Cliff Hanger
The US presidential elections of 2016 are going to be one of the most rivetting polls in recent memory.
4 mins
OCTOBER 2016
Translate
Change font size
