試す 金 - 無料
Depressing Window To Middle Class
Outlook
|October 23, 2017
Weak private investment, automation and redundant skills are gnawing at white-collar jobs. A political hot potato is in the moulding.
There’s an old, economy adage that goes like this: governments mainly lose elections either because of high inflation or high unemployment or both. Job creation for India’s burgeoning workforce has always been a pressing problem. In the aftermath of demonetisation, about 1.5 million mainly low-skilled jobs were lost in the first quarter this year, according to one estimate. Yet, it wasn’t until India’s blockbuster IT industry laid off thousands of workers—the first time in decades—that panic set in. There are telltale signs of a middle-class, urban job crunch. When white-collar jobs disappear, they are more acutely felt. That’s because, one, putting a number to formal-sector job losses is easy and, two, they are widely reported.
Amid widespread pessimism over jobless growth, the employment of the chattering middle-class looks vulnerable too, as India battles slow growth, poor investment cycles and economic headwinds. A crisis of so-called white-collar jobs—denoting professionals—is a potential political hot potato. The middle class in India is tenuous: with no strict boundaries, it includes virtually everybody from clerks to bosses in small offices. This smartphone-wielding class shapes public opinion faster than any other social category. Television channels speak their language and the media reflect their views more often than of the abjectly poor. If onion prices rise, for instance, it’s the middle-class housewife who is spoken to.
Firms that keep the middle class gainfully employed are battling debts. And across sectors, they are shrinking their wage bills. From IT firms to banks and power companies, firings are taking place, sometimes in a low-key fashion. Automation in the medium term is expected to make up to 52 per cent of current jobs redundant. That’s a whole different category of challenge altogether.
このストーリーは、Outlook の October 23, 2017 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Outlook からのその他のストーリー
Outlook
Hating Dating
For many women, dating in their 30s and 40s is defined less by romance than by exhaustion, confusion and a sense of emotional attrition
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Rage of Betrayals
THIS is a popular poem often shared when anyone talks of the 4B movement in South Korea. The women in this movement boycott the world of men; boycott heterosexual marriage, relationships, sex, and giving birth.
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Class and Caste
Caste hierarchies continue to exist in everyday life and across campuses. Due to the persistence of caste in schools and colleges, long believed to be places for upward mobility and rational thought, these institutions end up becoming spaces where questions of \"merit\", cultural capital, language and access-or the lack of thereof-are highlighted and ridiculed. The discrimination persists from Kashmir to Kerala. From delayed degrees and stalled promotions to verbal abuse, professional isolation, and sometimes death, these case studies underscore not isolated instances but a pattern
18 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
The Misuse Myth
A close look at reported cases over the past ten years shows that there is no pattern of rampant misuse of the SC/ST Act in universities or higher education institutions
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
The Higher, The Lower
What is clear is that the entrenched caste hierarchy feels that power is slipping out from their grasp
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Writing is Acting by Another Name
My wife spots him first while my attention is focused on the bucket of theatre popcorn (medium, salt and caramel mix). I look up and there he is. Pico Iyer, great travel writer, essayist, novelist, columnist, humanist, and in recent years, friend and correspondent. While the rest gasp when Timothee Chalamet appears in Marty Supreme, we gasp when Pico does.
3 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Sins of Savarnatva
The upper castes believe that the UGC regulations are a death knell to their own existence
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Invisible Labour, Visible Costs
Women shoulder disproportionate emotional and domestic work, shaping how they view intimacy and relationships
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Between textbooks and court orders
From first choice to uncertainty as HIMSR-Jamia Hamdard dispute leaves students stranded
5 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Aggressive Victimhood Versus Predictable Protests
The current controversy around the UGC regulations is meant neither to promote social justice and equity nor hurt the interests of the dominant castes. It's meant for the two to be at loggerheads and further consolidate their support behind the BJP-RSS combine
5 mins
February 21, 2026
Translate
Change font size
