In the case of the engineering colleges, the situation is not surprising. A national employability survey this year reported that only about one in six engineering graduates is employable. There are, possibly, half a million engineering graduates emerging from these colleges every year, but the National Association of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom) gripes on and on about impending shortage of employable engineers. Only one of India’s top-rated engineering colleges figures in Asia’s top 200.
Our politicians, encouraged by a few economists, often talk of the GDP in terms of the great “demographic dividend” to come by 2020, when more than 250 million Indians between the ages of 15 and 25 years will work and earn. But that might as well turn out to be the real problem. Where are the jobs? Not all of them will be engineers, employable or otherwise. The bulk of them will be farm-to-work or school-to-work poor, without skills to find employment in the cities and towns. In Bangalore, the software centre of India, many such people drive cabs and clean floors, but even these jobs will get scarce with the continued migration from villages to cities.
A working group set up by the government last year to recommend schemes to boost India’s exports stated plainly in its report: “Many advanced and developing countries followed a path of classical transformation of their economies from primary (agriculture and allied) to secondary (manufacturing) and tertiary (services) in successive stages. The share of the manufacturing sector in the GDP increased over time and in the process, the sector absorbed people migrating from agriculture for better employment prospects. However, in the case of India, the development process appears to have skipped the second stage of economic transition (industrial sector growth), moving directly to growth in the services sector.”
Clearly, India’s years of obsession with the ‘soft’ sectors like software and IT services, handling of clerical and business processes for clients abroad, have hurt its essentials. The economic growth of 20 years has been accompanied with the gradual decline of the old industrial sectors. As the government watches China with envy, India’s industry and manufacturing sector continues to return gloomy data. “The industrial output reading is just the latest data point suggesting a loss of momentum in Asia’s third-largest economy,” the Wall Street Journal noted this week. The ‘soft’ services sector has created great wealth for some individuals and employment opportunities for about one and half million engineers, but eventually hurt the Indian manufacturing sector and the overall economy. Because it needs English-speaking employees who are familiar with computers, it hires engineering graduates for other-than-engineering skills, in call centres and process jobs. The skills are critically required elsewhere, to build roads, drains and dams; to run factories and make goods. They hire them on salaries that the manufacturing sector cannot match because the clients abroad pay in dollars.
But now, there is a new national manufacturing policy. The policy actually marks a shift from India-shining fantasies to the blue-collar vision, where millions make the economy and take from it. They will grow exports and be the market, too. The policy firmly states that only good old manufacturing will offer large employment options to the 200 million who will need the jobs in the next 10 years. It offers tax benefits and incentives to manufacturing and engineering companies to start their own training centres to develop the skills they need to employ. The preference will be for local people and the courses and hands-on training will be in the local languages. In the next 10 years, the policy aims to create employment for 100 million people. It is back to basics — the factory floor.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 14th, 2012.
COMMENTS (17)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
@gp65:
Our export has been growing at 15% compunded for the last 15 years and grown to $300 billion. The export numbers are mercantile export i.e. does not include service exports e.g. BPO an IT. (gp65)
Curious to know whether the figure of $300 Billon, and growth percentages, reflect only the "manufactured" products or are they inclusive of raw material such as iron-ore & agri-produce like rice & bulk-tea etc etc.
@Indian Wisdom: Certainly concur with you that there has been underinvestment in the agricultural sector and also some of the laws relating to agriculture are regressive. For decades at a stretch the terms of trade for agriculture vs. manufacturing were negative. But the fact that 60% people are employed to agriculture simply points to massive disguised unemployment. YEs agriculture production needds to double in the next decade for national food security but it cannot be the source of jobs. People have to be transitioned fromthe primary sector to the secondar/tertiary sector.
@Ahi, @Nandishore "I guess entertainment and food will be the only place where manual jobs will be in future. US tried that model. Despite having one of the largest toursist industry in the world, ientertainment icons like Hllywood studios , Disney World, Disney Land, one of the largest education industries in the world, it just is not enough to provide enough middle class jobs for even Americans. Food servicing jbs simply do nto pay anyone enough to jon the middle class. Manufacturing has to happen.
Now I agree with NandKishore that some kinds of automation cannot and should not be stopped and the bank automation is certainly a perfect example. Absence of automation in a bank had a huge impact on customers since they were customers of a branch not customers f a bank and only could transact at specific counters within a branch. There were some macro controlstoo which were simply not feasible to implement in the old ledger based system. Another example is building road. Using a spade to dig could add to number of labourers employed but it would delay the economic benefits of the road and also caus e alot inconvenience in the interim. In those situations mechanisation/automation is a must. The examples I am caling for are precisely ones like TISCO. The significant downsizing and investment in capital intensive manufacturing processes is only partially driven by cost and quality considerations but to a large extent the driving factor is labour laws in India are archaic and do not provide too much flexibility to the employer.
The mobile issue you referrd to Nand Kishoreji reminds me of how Americans had projected that millions of people woud be employed as telephone operators when the telephone revolution began in that country. Of course direct dialling put paid to that. @John B YEs there is labour shortages in the places you indicated but also there still is widespread disguised unemployment and hunger. Also NREGA has distorted labour markets in India particularly market for agricultural labour by preventing distress migration. The labour shortage is driven by lack of skills rather than available bodies. So you are right India is in transition with huge investments neeed in physical infrastructure (electricity, ports, roads) as well soft infrastructure such as health, education, skills and ofcourse governance systems.
service sector was the king when everything was okay in world market,we were proud of our BPOs and call centers.now everyone is singing the song of manufacturing sector,irrespective of the demand in local and international market.Chinese example is a misnomer as, they have succeeded by providing infrastructural facilities at a dirt cheap cost.they can afford it due to their bamboo curtain policies,we cant.so India is bound to lag behind China in manufacturing sector at least in near foreseeable future unless we employ some cutting edge technology or innovation.....the indiscriminate way we are creating engineers who do not have a basic knowledge of technology is only compounding our problems.govt's myopic policies are only responsible for this whole mess...
@gp65 and Nandkishore
Robots replacing manpower is real problem of todays world. Obama may try to create manufacturing jobs in US but the truth is that it is not going to happen. The good old days of Detroit kind of cities where most of the people work in factories is not going to comeback.Production is fast getting automated, even in under developed country like India factories are hiring less people. Tata Steel has now only 1/10th of manpower which it has in 1950s but produces 20 times more steel. Even china has to move away from labour intensive factories soon.
How the wealth will be distributed in future is key question for which there is no real answer. I guess entertainment and food will be the only place where manual jobs will be in future.
@John B: Thanks for the informed response!!
@Indian Wisdom: India produces surplus agriculture and the focus of the government for the past 20 years has been Infrastructure development and improvement, energy and industrial expansion (in that order). The private sector spurred growth in IT related industries boosted the service sector jobs and migration of people from agriculture to other service sector jobs and commerce. Some farmers are left out in the competition.
Govt of India has called for global tenders for massive country wide cold storage facilities and acquired infrastructure funding, Private conglomerates are already building many. Cold storage facilities are energy guzzlers and hence the concurrent focus on energy.
The next phase is manufacturing. For that India needs surplus electricity and hence the massive construction of coal and nuclear power plants despite all the political drama.
The current shortage of labor in small scale manufacturing is a good sign in disguise since this helps transitioning into a efficient manufacturing system and will be ready for pool of workers moving from agriculture and domestic sector.
The opinion column is very peripheral on the subject area. There is an another 10 year transitioning period, you are in the middle of it, so everything looks discordant.
@C. Nandkishore: Agree with you on most of the points. What we require is innovation and converting ideas into commercially viable products. A young population can only be an asset up to a point. Beyond that threshold its but a liability and an unstablising factor in a country. Many of the current problems here in India and its neighbourhood and also in middle east can be traced to it.
@Prakash Belawadi;
"However, in the case of India, the development process appears to have skipped the second stage of economic transition (industrial sector growth), moving directly to growth in the services sector.” The problem is India has not given enough attention even on the primary sector of Agriculture. We might boast of service sector or manufacturing sector but the fact is largest employer is agriculture sector and more than 60% of Indian population is still dependent upon agriculture that too te rain fed agriculture, and having very poor system of logistics (including cold chain) , soil fertility conservation system etc. We can not provide jobs to such a huge mass of population overnight with service sector and not even with manufacturing sector. We need to first address the primary sector of agriculture itself with second green revolution particularly in central, east and northeast of India.Agriculture Infrastructural development is the basic necessity to provide employment to the vast masses of agricultural communities of the country.
@gp65 1. You have not touched the examples I gave of mobiles and motorcycles. 2. Abundant labour cannot replace machines. Time is inelastic and quality has to be made inelastic. In both the cases machines score heavily against labour. 3. I still remember in India in 1980s when the bank unions used to strike against computers using the same reason you gave, abundant labour. Are the banks employing less today? 4. Manufacturing may go back to US because they might have found a better way to produce without employing labour. 5. To get clarity, as an extreme case, take railways. Why have railways when you can use bullock carts, more labour will be employed. Also no capital substituting labour. And no abundant capital required.
we give too much importance to software.
@C. Nandkishore: The examples you are giving of capital substituting labor is correct in countries that have a high cost of labour and have abundant capital. It does not apply to India. Also even US now realizes that it cannot build its economy just based on service jobs. So it is changing its policies to reverse the manufacturing outsourcing that happened in the past 2 decades.
Massive employment in the good old manufacturing is dead long ago. As an personal example, 30 years ago, 10 persons used to produce 3 diesel engines in 3 shifts in India. Whereas the parent US company used to produce 600 per shift with 10 persons. Another example is the company bought a machine that did the work of 30 employees. Emphasis should not be on producing welders and fitters. These have been replaced by robots long ago. All human skills that can be accomplished by a machine / robot will be done by machines and robots. Service industry is the answer. As an example take the mobile sector. How many are employed in the manufacture of mobiles and how many are employed in service of mobiles? Or take motorcycles, how many are in manufacturing and how many are in servicing? Very few people can predict from where employment can be generated in the next decade: tourism, hospitality, logistics, municipal services, banking and insurance, etc. But certainly not manufacturing.
There is an acute shortage of labor in small scale manufacturing in India. Ask any financiers of the manufacturing or the small scale manufacturers. A good pulse of small scale manufacturing problem of India can be found in Poona, Ludhiana, Coimbatore and Bangalore.
Twenty years ago, small scale manufacturing labor pool was dominated by men, then shifted to women, and now people migrating as far a away as Bihar fill the void. That leaves acute shortage of labor in Bihar and so on.
As the economy booms, India cannot supply all the labor force necessary in all areas. There is already a shortage of labor in agriculture and the large scale migration of people from one state to another is a good indication where the growth is.
"Clearly, India’s years of obsession with the ‘soft’ sectors like software and IT services, handling of clerical and business processes for clients abroad, have hurt its essentials. The economic growth of 20 years has been accompanied with the gradual decline of the old industrial sectors" Factually incorrect. Our export has been growing at 15% compunded for the last 15 years and grown to $300 billion. The export numbers are mercantile export i.e. does not include service exports e.g. BPO an IT.
The root cause for 1 in 6 engineering graduate being 'employable' is that the number of engineering seats has gone up many foldbut the number of engineering masters degrees and Ph.D.s entering the teaching sector has nto kept up. A lot of ministers have set up engineering colleges seeing this as a lucrative field while minimum standards are not enforced. None of this is related to te success of the IT/BPO field.
YEs greater focus on manufacturing jobs is celarly needed but issue is not about engineering colleges not being part of top 200 in the world. Rather it is that there are no enough welders, fitters, electricians etc. India needs far more ITIs than IITs. The government is already focussing on the skills development issue. There is shortage of electricity and situation is likely to get worse before it gets better. Again there is a half finished agenda on power sector reforms that there simply is not enough political courage to implement - because many vested interests would be dversely impacted. Please also note that our labour laws are highly regressive and hence people prefer capital intensive processes rather than labour intensive processes in a labour surplus and capital scarce country. No government has the political appetite to change those laws.
If you want to give opinion about economic issues, please put in some elbow grease to understand them. You might do that by talking to key stakeholders, do some secondary research instead of writing a blog based on a drawing room conversation with some of yur arty friends. Even in your last blog you had referred to Pakistan as a big market for Indian movies without doing the homework to find out that it contributes less than 2-3% revenue to a typical successful Bollywood moviie with one of the Khans - even less for other movies that may not even get a Pakistani release. You simply went by the population and assumed that this WOULD be a big market.
We need to employ more people in manufacturing, construction, departments. Govt needs to speed up infrastructure spending.