This chapter examines two developmental indicators: the growth of employment and the growth of gross domestic product (GDP). Planned development in India since independence has aimed at expanding the economy by increasing national product and employment. The relationship between GDP growth and employment growth is important for understanding whether economic expansion translates into improved livelihoods for the population. The period from the 1960s to 2000 shows distinct patterns in the pace and composition of employment and the way growth has affected different sections of the workforce.
Between 1960 and 2000 India's GDP grew positively, though its growth rate fluctuated over time. During most of this period employment also grew, but at a lower and more stable rate of about 2 per cent per year. In the late 1990s employment growth began to decline and reached levels comparable to the early stages of India's planning era.
As GDP growth accelerated at times, the increase in output was not matched by a proportional increase in employment. This widening gap between GDP growth and employment growth has implications for poverty, inequality and the quality of jobs created.
Jobless growth describes a situation where an economy increases its production of goods and services (GDP) without generating a corresponding increase in employment. In India during the late 1990s and thereafter, scholars identified episodes of jobless growth because economic output rose faster than employment.
Jobless growth is important for policy because growth that does not create jobs leaves many people without improved livelihoods even as national income rises.
The distribution of the workforce across primary, secondary and tertiary sectors changed substantially between the early 1970s and 2000.
This structural shift indicates expanding non-farm employment opportunities, with the service sector accounting for many of the newly emerging jobs.
Changes in the status of employment over the last few decades show that many people have moved from self-employment and regular salaried employment to casual wage work. This process is referred to as casualisation of the workforce.
Casualisation raises concerns about income instability, absence of benefits and the vulnerability of workers to economic shocks.
One of the long-standing goals of development planning has been to provide decent livelihoods and to move workers from low-productivity agriculture to better paid, protected jobs in industry and services. Despite planned development, a large majority of the workforce remains outside formally regulated employment.
To understand this, we distinguish between the formal (organized) sector and the informal (unorganized) sector:
Key facts and trends:
Workers in the informal sector usually lack regular income, social security benefits such as maternity benefits, provident fund, gratuity and pension, and have limited protection from dismissal or exploitation. Technology and working conditions in many informal enterprises are often outdated and unsafe.
In recent decades, international organisations such as the International Labour Organization (ILO) have pressed for modernising informal enterprises and extending social security. The Indian government has also initiated reforms and programmes to improve productivity and provide some social security to informal workers.
Understanding unemployment requires clear definitions and reliable data.
Definition (NSSO-inspired): An unemployed person is one who, owing to lack of work, is not working but either seeks work through employment exchanges, intermediaries, friends or relatives, or by making applications to prospective employers, or expresses willingness or availability for work under the prevailing conditions of work and remuneration. Economists sometimes define an unemployed person as one who is not able to get employment even for one hour in half a day.
Main sources of data on unemployment in India:
These sources provide different estimates because of varying definitions, reference periods and methods of data collection, but together they help describe the characteristics of the unemployed and the forms of unemployment present in the economy.
Common types of unemployment observed in India:
The coexistence of disguised, seasonal and underemployment means that many people cannot remain completely unemployed for long; they take up low-paid, insecure, or informal jobs to survive.
Governments at the Union and state levels play an important role in generating employment. Their interventions can be broadly categorised as direct and indirect measures.
In addition to these roles, the government runs specific employment generation programmes which aim to provide wage employment and to create durable community assets. Typical objectives of such programmes include providing primary health and education services, rural shelter and drinking water, nutrition support, assistance to acquire income-generating assets, and development of rural infrastructure such as roads, sanitation and wasteland development.
National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, 2005 (NREGA):
The Act, passed by Parliament in 2005, promises up to 100 days of guaranteed wage employment in a financial year to rural adult household members who volunteer to do unskilled manual work. The scheme is designed to provide a social safety net, augment rural livelihood security and create rural assets. It represents a statutory right to work subject to conditions and is one of the significant policy responses to rural unemployment and underemployment.
The structure of India's workforce has changed considerably in recent decades. Employment has shifted away from the primary sector toward secondary and especially tertiary activities, with newly emerging jobs concentrated largely in the service sector. At the same time, the nature of employment has become more informal, with a large majority of workers lacking social security and regular incomes. The phenomena of casualisation and informalisation of work, together with episodes of jobless growth, pose serious policy challenges.
To address these challenges, governments have combined direct employment creation, public investment and targeted employment schemes such as NREGA with efforts to modernise informal enterprises and extend social protection. Continued emphasis on labour-intensive sectors, skill development, social security coverage and improvement of working conditions is necessary to ensure that economic growth translates into secure, decent and inclusive employment for a larger proportion of the population.
| 1. What is the meaning of the term "growth" in the context of employment? | ![]() |
| 2. How does the structure of employment change over time? | ![]() |
| 3. What are the factors that contribute to the growth and changing structure of employment? | ![]() |
| 4. How does globalization affect the structure of employment? | ![]() |
| 5. What are the potential challenges associated with the changing structure of employment? | ![]() |