1 / 46

Strategies for Full Employment in India

Strategies for Full Employment in India. Uncommon Opportunities: Roadmap for Employment, Food & Global Security November 21, 2004 International Center for Peace & Development, USA The Mother’s Service Society, Pondicherry. Unemployment. 1993-94 20M 1999-00 27M

Download Presentation

Strategies for Full Employment in India

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strategies for Full Employment in India Uncommon Opportunities: Roadmap for Employment, Food & Global Security November 21, 2004 International Center for Peace & Development, USA The Mother’s Service Society, Pondicherry

  2. Unemployment • 1993-94 20M • 1999-00 27M • Twice as high for lower consumption classes • On daily basis 35M • Youth Unemployment 13% • Kerala 35%

  3. Natural Employment Generation • New entrants to labour force ` 7-8M/yr • Urban migration 1M/yr • Agriculture employment is flat • Less growth in unemployment -1M/yr • Natural job generation 7-8M/yr • The absence of social unrest and the fact that urban migration continues and urban unemployment does not rise enormously indicate the surpluses are being absorbed. • This is unorganized, unconscious process akin to education without schools Make the unconscious process CONSCIOUS

  4. How society stimulates employment • New products • New services • Growth in demand • Technological innovation • Higher quality &/or productivity • Organizational innovation • Higher skills • Better access to information • Increased speed • Legislation & law enforcement • Administrative responsiveness • Environment/health consciousness • Change of attitudes

  5. Three Approaches to Employment Generation • Expand existing activities • Nursery schools, tutorial institutes, English teaching • Borrow from other countries • Credit rating & collection agencies • Trade shows & network marketing • Health clinics • Promote culturally compatible activities • STD & chit funds • Marriage halls • Mini-power plants • Rural information centres • Contract farming agencies

  6. Available Modes of Action • Increase access to credit • Provide incentives for new initiatives • Strengthen or enforce legislation • Impart training • Use insurance as a stimulus • Publicize opportunities in the media

  7. Where are the untapped potentials • Raise farm productivity • Renewable energy • Agro-industrial linkages • Service sector • Employable skills • Application of IT

  8. Prosperity 2000 Strategy • Agriculture as engine for industrialization & employment growth • Shift focus from meeting minimum production needs to maximumizing profit per unit land & water • Projecting market growth based on nutritional requirements • Raise productivity of soil & water • Shift to commercial crops which absorb more labour • Develop industry linkages with industries • Create 4.5 million direct & 5.5 million indirect employment opportunities per annum

  9. India’s Crop Productivity Gap (kg/ha)

  10. Low farm productivity results in • High unit cost of production • High priced food • Low farm incomes & purchasing power • Low labour absorption • High water consumption/unit of produce • Limited export potential & threat from imports (e.g. cotton)

  11. Technology Strategies • Raise crop yields • Raise water productivity • Improve post-harvest storage & transport • Expand & upgrade processing industries Raising productivity can create millions of on-farm and off-farm employment opportunities.

  12. Horticulture • Labour content 6 times cereals • Generates 10-30 times earning / unit area • Filling India’s nutritional gap requires 40% growth • Add 4M ha horticulture to raise production 40% • Generate 8 million jobs

  13. Food Processing • Improve storage & processing to reduce Rs 70,000 crores in crop losses • Global share of processed food exports is rising • India processes only 2% fruits & vegetables vs. Thailand 30%, Brazil 70%, Philippines & Malaysia 78-80%) • India projected to process 10% fruit & veg by 2010 • Industry directly employs 1.6M

  14. Power Demand to Triple by 2020

  15. Oil Demand to Triple by 2020

  16. Cotton & Textile Industry • India is 3rd largest producer of cotton • Domestic demand projected to grow 70% by 2010 • Export demand projected to triple by 2010 • Double productivity of cotton • Double area under irrigated cotton • 12 million additional jobs in textile industry

  17. Forestry, Herbs, Medicinal Plants • 100 M rely on forests for main source of livelihood, including half of India’s 70M tribals • Objective to raise forest cover 50% in 10 ys • Introduce corporate contract farming with bonded performance guarantees & assured employment for local population

  18. Fisheries • World seafood market doubled in the 1990s • India’s marine & inland fisheries employ 6M • 1/3rd of India’s marine fishery potential untapped • China full-time employment in rural aquaculture • 1989 – 1.5M • 1997 – 3.3M • Shrimp farming -- 4 direct & 4 indirect jobs per ha • 1999 – 161,000 ha generates employment for 1.3M • Additional 120,000 ha would create 1M jobs

  19. Dairy • Rs 100,000 crores by 2005 • India is largest and lowest cost producer • 70M dairy farmers • Cooperatives provide employment for 11M families • Potential for 42M jobs

  20. Employment Potential -- summary

  21. Organization for Rural Prosperity • Self Help Groups • Contract Farming • Rural Information Centers • Farm Schools

  22. Self Help Groups • 1 million created in 3 years • 15 million members benefit • 90%+ repayment of loans • Mostly for non-farm activities • Commodity-wise SHGs for agriculture • Appachi Foundation & ICICI – 60 SHGs for cotton growers in Tamil Nadu

  23. Contract Farming • Successful Indian model -- sugar mills • Organize SHGs of farmers • Role of the Contractor • Provide quality inputs • Arrange credit with banks • Arrange crop insurance • Deliver extension services • Tie-up market with industry • Operate farm schools

  24. Farm Schools cum Extension Objective: double farm yields in 3 years • Lead farmers act as paid field training & extension staff for the contractor • Lead farmers run Farm Schools on village lands • Demonstrate methods on farmers’ lands • Train farmers & disseminates information • Operate or link to Village Information Centre • Link to soil test labs • Link to agro-service centres

  25. Rural IT Knowledge Centres • Mission 2007 – 500,000 village centres • Can create 5 jobs per centre • Can charge for services • Soil analysis -- expert system for advice • Multi-media farm training • Input supply information • Market information • Educational information • Health information • E-government services • Other vocational training

  26. Ag Enterprises -- Policy Issues • On-farm training system • Enforce sanctity of contracts • Expand access to credit through SHGs with group guarantees & post-dated checks, including present defaulters. • Extend powers of Revenue Recovery Act to ensure repayment by SHGs. • Tax credits for contractors who raise farm productivity • Strengthen crop insurance program • Penalties for false documentation by officials • Penalties for adulteration of ag inputs • Railways to provide refrigerated storage & transport

  27. Service Sector • USA: provides 80% of jobs • India: • Grew by 60M jobs in 18 yrs • Rose from 25% to 32% of total employment • High potential fields • Tourism • Transport, storage, communication • Education • Health care • Financial services • Internet-based activities

  28. Internet-based Self-Employment • Desktop publishing • Web design • Web research • E-books • Translation • Technical writing • Engineering & technical services Opportunities from Rs 5000 to 1 lakh per month

  29. Vocational Skills • 50% of firms in developing and industrialized countries report severe shortage of skilled workers. • India’s problem is not lack of employment opportunities but lack of employable skills. • Skills create employment and self-employment opportunities.

  30. Vocational Skills Gap • Only 5% of India’s workforce (20-24 years) have vocational training compared with 28% in Mexico and 96% in Korea. • By 2010 major labour shortages will emerge in the industrialized nations forcing movement of both manufacturing & service jobs to wherever the skills are best. • Upgrading skills essential to tap global markets

  31. Vocational Training in India • 4200 ITIs • 1,654 government run • 2,620 private • Courses offered • 43 engineering & 24 non-engineering trades • Capacity – 6.3 lakhs • State enterprise programmes – 1.7 lakh • Including agriculture & other – 20 lakh

  32. Vocational Training Deficit

  33. Three Models • Farm Schools in every revenue village • Vocational Schools • Computerized & Televised Vocational Training

  34. Vocational Schools • Promote vocational institutes at block and district level • 5000 govt • 50,000 private • Conduct exams for every skill as for drivers licenses • Certify approved training centres, e.g. BPO • Provide scholarships & incentives for trainees

  35. Computer-based learning is twice as fast @ half the cost • Multimedia • Interactive • Immediate Feedback • Self-paced learning • Eliminates need for trained teachers • Responds rapidly to changing skill needs • Uniform testing

  36. Computerized Vocational Training • Establish 1 lakh CVT Institutes like internet cafes • 50,000 in private sector • 50,000 training centres at engineering and arts colleges, ITIs, polytechs, high schools, NGOs, etc. • Partnership with industry to develop multimedia training software • Provide training to a minumum of 4 million students per annum • Government certification of courses • Generate self-employment opportunities for 50,000 entrepreneurs

  37. Multimedia vocational courses

  38. CVT Job Shops • Privately owned, self-employment • Each centre with 1 to 10 computers • Stocked with a library of training software • Training material on CD-Rom format • Fees based on an hourly rate

  39. CVT Job Shop: Assumptions • Three computers per Job Shop • 20 training programmes per Job Shop • Each computer utilized 300 hours per mo • Operating expenses for rent, two paid employees, phone, electricity may range from Rs 15,000 to 20,000 per month

  40. CVT Job Shop: Economics • Capital investment Rs 1.5 lakh. • Cost of operations per computer hour = Rs 20 / hour. • Cost of amortising of computers and software over two years = Rs 14 per hour • Average cost of training = Rs 35 per hour • Average retail price of training = Rs 50 per hour • Net profit = Rs 15 per hour or Rs 1.5 lakhs / yr • 50 hours of computerized vocational training, equivalent to about 250 hours of classroom training, would cost the student only Rs 2500.

  41. Training Software: Economics • Cost Rs 50 lakhs per course • Retail price Rs 1000 per set • Sale of 10,000 sets generates Rs 50 lakhs profit • Offer 50% government subsidy for development of approved courses

  42. CVT Action Plan • Delivery CVT through all state-owned engineering colleges, ITIs, Polytechnics, liberal arts colleges, high schools, other institutions. • Provide financial assistance/ incentives under Central Government self-employment schemes to promote private training institutes. • Encourage financial institutions to provide loans to entrepreneurs. • Negotiate with computer software companies to develop a wide range of vocational training courses. • Recognized institutional authorities to certify course contents. • Finance bulk purchase of approved training software with 50% subsidy to minimize the cost of training. • Train entrepreneurs to set up/manage private institutes. • Provide scholarships to low income youth to cover training fees.

  43. IT Incubator Business Parks • Computerised vocation training • Computerised tuitions institutes • Computerised language training • Software training • Video-conferencing services • High speed data transfer services • Web, graphic and animation design services • Computer repair and maintenance services • International Internet telephony • Computer hardware parts manufacturing and assembly • Customer and technical support call centres • Back office processing • Medical transcription • Digital photography, scanning and image processing • Internet research services • Accounting services • Computerized testing laboratories

  44. Who creates enterprises? • Skilled experienced workers leaving existing jobs create enterprises • Machinists • taxi drivers • hotel servers • bus cleaners • Printers • tailors • Do entrepreneurial training programmes work?

  45. Promoting Entrepreneurship • Extend bank credit & seed capital to employees with 5 years experience • Require training & certification for new enterprises to reduce failure rate • Existing entrepreneur to sign as guarantor • Insurance companies can ensure loans based on qualifications

  46. Issues for Study • Natural job creation • How many jobs are being created? • In which sectors & fields? • By what process? • How can the natural process be magnified and accelerated? • How are rural migrants absorbed in the cities? • Occupational demand • Identify high growth occupational categories at all levels • Measure growth in pay/income levels by category • Emerging Activities • Identify emerging occupations in all sectors, • Farm managers & Soil technicians • Servicing for cell phones, ACs, computers, VCDs, etc. • Home delivery, floor cleaner, masseuse • Skills for national development • Compile a complete list of skills needed for India’s development to next higher level • Job creation in other countries • Study which job categories grew rapidly in US during a comparable period? • Efficacy of Entrepreneurial Development Programmes

More Related