Context: 
Recently, the Indian Prime Minister distributed 51,000 appointment letters via video conferencing to newly inducted recruits as part of the Rozgar Mela (Employment Fair). 
- Since October last year, the government has been organizing these fairs to fill up the 10 lakh (or 1 million) existing vacancies in all types of government jobs before the general election of 2024.
 
Concerning Data on Unemployment in India: 
- As per Periodic Labour Force Survey, for 2017-18 the unemployment had hit a 45-year high. 
 
- Academics found that between 2012 and 2018, the total employment fell for the first time in India’s history — by as much as 9 million (or 90 lakhs) in 6 years. 
 
- In early 2020, Covid pandemic worsened unemployment in India.
 
- It was also shown that India is not a country for working women and its workforce is becoming increasingly male dominated.
 
- By August 2022, unemployment had hit a 12 month high. 
 
- An alarming trend of India is becoming a young country but with an aging workforce.
 
Rozgar Mela: Why not a Solution to the Unemployment Crisis?
- No Adequate Jobs: India needs to create anywhere between 20 million to 200 million new jobs but in comparison these Melas are providing negligible jobs.
 
- No Job Creation: These are only pre-existing vacancies, not new job creation.
 
- Low Public Employment: The size of public employment in India was already quite low. 
 
Problems of Employment in India: Complex both in form and content
- Partial Unemployment: A large part of the available working population for some part of the year, month, or day; this is best described as open underemployment.
 
- Very Low Productivity: Productivity being so low when peoples nominally engaged in work; this is often referred to as the disguised unemployment in the economy.
 
- Full, Continuous and Open Unemployment: It bears much the same characteristics as unemployment in developed, industrial economies.
 
Challenges:
- The recent rise in self-employment, worsening youth unemployment and rising unemployment with education levels. All of these also have a worsening gender aspect.
 
- India has a high youth population that faces the highest unemployment levels and also accounts for almost 80% of all unemployment in India. 
 
- India’s manufacturing has struggled and the less-educated workers are engaged in low-paying, precarious and unstable work arrangements.
 
Strategy to move towards Labor-Intensive Industrialisation:
- Change in India’s industrial policy framework
 
- A radical rethink of India’s labor regulatory regime by considering labor as human capital (which need to be invested)
 
- A comprehensive cluster development policy which allows small and medium sized firms to enjoy collective efficiency
 
Solution to India’s Unemployment:
- Enabling Environment: It is not the job of the government to give jobs; its job is to create the enabling environment so that the economy itself creates more jobs.
 
- Boost Manufacturing: Need to focus on the sectoral composition of GDP growth and India needs to boost its manufacturing.
 
- Need to Change Perception: While, the government is focussing on Make in India and the PLI (Production-linked Incentive) scheme but the government needs to focus on labor-intensive manufacturing as well as small and medium enterprises. 
- PLI often has focussed more on capital-intensive manufacturing.
 
 
News Source: The Indian Express