The
message from reports from the ground is clear. Unemployment in India's
industrial and services sectors is on the rise. If earlier growth
was being described as ''jobless'', the problem now is that growth
that is lower comes with job losses. The recessionary impact that
the global financial and economic crisis has had is resulting in huge
job losses in various segments of the labour market. However, a reliable
aggregate estimate of the extent of increase in unemployment is not
available from the official statistical system. Recognising that unemployment
is on the rise, the government did make an attempt to estimate the
impact of the downturn on employment. On its request, the Labour Bureau
conducted a sample survey covering eight sectors (Mining, Textile
& Textile Garments, Metals & Metal Products, Automobile, Gems
& Jewellery, Construction, Transport and the IT/BPO industry)
to arrive at an estimate of job loss. The survey was designed to cover
a sample of units employing 10 or more workers, with the sample being
drawn from 20 centres in 11 states and uUnion Territories..
Finally, 2581 units were covered, of which 1168 were from the Textile
& Garments industry, 752 from Metals & Metal Products, 242
from Information Technology & Business Process Outsourcing, 132
from Automobiles, 104 from Gems & Jewellery, 103 from Transportation,
19 from Mining, and 61 from Construction. Based on this limited sample,
the total employment in all the sectors covered by the survey is estimated
to have declined from 16.2 million during September 2008 to 15.7 million
during December 2008, implying a job loss of about half a million
(Table 1). Given the coverage and methodology of the survey, few believe
that this is an acceptable estimate. The actual decline in employment
during this period is likely to have been much higher. Moreover, the
decline is likely to have occurred over a much longer period.
However, the survey does suggest that employment fell in every month
during the period studied. After September 2008 employment in all
industries declined at an average rate of 1.01 per cent per month.
A comparison of employment in export and non-export units indicates
that employment declined at an average monthly rate of 1.13 per cent
in the case of the former, as opposed to 0.81 per cent in the latter
(Table 2), pointing to the direct role of the global slowdown.
Table
1: Trends in Average Employment, India (million) |
Period
|
Average Employment |
%age change |
September,08
|
16.2 |
|
October,08 |
16 |
-1.21 |
November,08 |
15.9 |
-0.74 |
December,08 |
15.7 |
-1.12 |
Average Monthly change |
|
-1.01 |
Source: Labour
Bureau, Ministry of Labour and Employment |
Table
2: Percentage change in Employment of Exporting
and Non-Exporting units |
Period
|
Exporting
Units |
Non- Exporting Units |
Overall |
October,08 |
-1.3 |
-1.05 |
-1.21 |
November,08 |
-0.45 |
-1.24 |
-0.74 |
December,08 |
-1.66 |
-0.15 |
-1.12 |
Average Monthly change |
-1.13
|
-0.81 |
-1.01 |
Source: Labour
Bureau, Ministry of Labour and Employment |
With aggregate data being limited, the assessment of and response to
rising unemployment has been driven by episodic evidence of job loss
highlighted by the media. However, given the nature of India's boom
and the pattern of recent growth it is the loss of white collar jobs
that garners attention from the media. This was evident when Jet Airways,
beleaguered by high oil prices, increased competition and falling demand,
laid off around a thousand employees. The response to the announcement
was so adverse that the company was forced to go back on its decision
and focus instead on restructuring its operations and obtaining concessions
from the government to reduce its losses.
Similarly, other labour market developments that have received and are
receiving media attention are evidence of sluggishness in on-campus
recruitment from elite institutions like the IITs and IIMs, lay-offs
and redundancies in software services and business process outsourcing
firms and evidence of job losses in the Gulf countries. Much less attention
has been paid to job losses of informally employed blue collar workers
in the organized sector or those dependent on wage- or self-employment
in unorganized manufacturing, services and agriculture.
The attention devoted to white collar jobs in select sectors is partly
understandable, given that the crisis originated in and affected most
of all the financial sector in the source countries. Moreover, even
in India the crisis hit the financial sector first, being transmitted
through the exodus of foreign financial capital that withdrew from the
country in order to meet commitments or cover losses incurred by these
firms in the source countries. This impacted immediately on white collar
workers employed in the financial sector. Predictably, the crisis in
the developed countries also affected workers in the software and IT-enabled
Services (ITeS) sector, because the crisis-afflicted financial industry
in the developed countries was an important outsourcer of business to
India. Software and ITeS, which were among the fastest growing exports
, were also likely to be the most affected in the wake of a developed
country downturn. Here too the victims of job losses were sections considered
part of the white collar elite.
However, there were more routes than these through which the crisis
was transmitted to India. One, for example, was the direct impact of
the global trade slowdown on traditional export industries like textiles
and garments, gems and jewellery, leather and carpets. According to
the IMF, the growth of exports from emerging and developing economies
is likely to fall from a positive 9.6 per cent in 2007 and 5.6 per cent
in 2008 to a negative 0.8 per cent in 2009. It is small recompense that
the rate of growth is projected to rebound sharply in 2010. Such projections
are suspect, since the IMF has made it a habit of putting out optimistic
projections and then revising them downwards. In fact, the 2009 slump
could prove sharper than currently predicted. With traditional exports
still dominating India's manufactured exports, these industries were
bound to be affected most, as is clearly true in Surat's diamond cutting
industry where low wage workers cater to the world market for an expensive
luxury.
Besides this, the recession is bound to affect demand, capacity utilization
and employment in a wide range of manufacturing industries catering
to the domestic market. Moreover, growth in a number of areas such as
the housing sector, automobiles and consumer durables had been driven
by credit-financed purchases encouraged by easy liquidity and low interest
rates. The curtailment of credit provision by a damaged or cautious
financial sector would further reduce demand, increase inventories and
lead to job losses in industries directly or indirectly catering to
such credit-financed investment and consumption. Influenced by these
trends and the second-order of effects of contraction in these areas
on demand for other manufacturing sectors, there will be a wider range
of industries and segments of the labour market that will be affected
by the ongoing crisis.
Finally, as a result of all these developments, the demand for agricultural
commodities and the viability of crop production is being increasingly
eroded. But with the government confident that the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Scheme (NREGS) has generated additional employment in rural
areas, the impact that the crisis is having on employment in agriculture
and non-agriculture in the rural areas is being underplayed. The budget
estimates that the NREGS delivered 13.88 million person days of additional
employment in 2008-09. But this employment in public works, which definitely
needs to be celebrated and expanded, need not have fully or even substantially
neutralised the loss of routine or regular employment in rural India,
however limited or underpaid such employment is. The NREGS is a demand-driven
scheme and the sharp increase in employment generated through the scheme
need not only be because the previously unemployed opted for it, but
because those losing jobs are turning to it as an alternative. If so,
the urgency of increasing allocations substantially is obvious.
Overall, therefore, the unfolding crisis is resulting in significant
job losses across the country, as the accompanying reports and assessment
by Frontline correspondents attest. What is surprising, however, is
the lack of any sense of urgency on the part of the government in the
face of this crisis. In fact, the initial response was that since the
Indian financial sector was not significantly exposed to the sub-prime
mortgage crisis and the toxic assets associated with it, the crisis
would not impact India. Subsequently, while it was accepted that India
was indeed being affected, the perception seemed to be that this effect
was largely because of the liquidity squeeze and credit decline that
resulted from the exodus of foreign capital from the stock market. The
government's response was thus focused on increasing liquidity in the
system and reducing interest rates. The first sign of the government's
recognition that there was a slump in demand that needed direct action
came only in December 2008. Unfortunately, the resulting response was
limited, so that the economy and employment are still slipping.
Yet, even as recently as at the time of the presentation of the Interim
Budget in mid-February, the government seemed to be complacent. Pranab
Mukherjee's budget speech referred to the effect of the crisis as follows:
''A crisis of such magnitude in developed countries is bound to have
an impact around the world. Most emerging market economies have slowed
down significantly. India too has been affected. For the first nine
months of the current year, the growth rate of exports has come down
to 17.1 per cent. According to the latest figures available, the industrial
production has fallen by 2 per cent year-on-year basis in December 2008.
In these difficult times, when most economies are struggling to stay
afloat, a healthy 7.1 per cent rate of GDP growth still makes India
the second fastest growing economy in the world.'' In sum, the view
seems to be, we are not untouched but are faring relatively well all
the same.
A consequence of such complacence is that the interim budget chose to
avoid taking any further steps of significance to counter the crisis.
Such a state of denial is possible only because public resentment at
the effects of the crisis is just building up. Further, since the strength
of unions has been eroded by casualisation, outsourcing and high unemployment
and the political opposition is divided, the government is not under
pressure to address the crisis seriously. Despite these possible explanations,
the attitude of the UPA government is puzzling. With an election nearing
and an economic crisis offering the justification and therefore an opportunity
to the government to spend its way to victory, it is surprising that
the state is still seized by fiscal conservatism.
There could be two explanations for this. The first could be that the
Congress party is actually in a state of disconnect, having lost its
links with the grass roots and increasingly unconscious of developments
on the ground. With the party having to depend on the prestige of one
family and its scions to garner it votes this is not unlikely. The situation
may be worsened by media that are disconnected and focused merely on
the stock markets and India's attractiveness to foreign capital. In
the event, the party and UPA government may not even be cognizing the
dimensions of the unfolding crisis. Unfortunately for it, there is no
organized, vocal force at the moment strong enough to make it recognize
reality. This could mean that a voiceless electorate may be forced to
respond in the coming elections with a mandate that treats the ''Bharat
Nirman'' slogan of the current UPA government with the same contempt
it gave its predecessor's ''India Shining'' campaign.
The second explanation could be that the levers of the Congress have
been seized by fiscally conservative neoliberal economic ideologues
and cynical political satraps, neither of whom have an inkling of either
the current electoral strength of the Congress or of what needs to be
done to win the forthcoming elections. It is possible that long years
of destruction of the mass mobilisation infrastructure of the party
may have denuded it of those who can forcefully make the case for alternative
policies that can meet the aspirations of a beleaguered electorate.
In the event, the fiscal conservatives and neoliberals may have come
to dominate the economic discourse, making a case for reversing the
foreign capital drain through more liberalisation and offering concessions
to private capital, rather than creating the domestic political space
for a national revival and rejuvenation plan.
In either case the loss is national, since there are no left allies
to force the hands of the Congress. This was what happened in the case
of the rural employment guarantee scheme, which is now being touted
as a flagship scheme that has helped India beat the recession and praised
even by those who had bitterly opposed it earlier. Without some pressure
for more such policies, job losses will continue, attributed by industry
to ''attrition'' and cynical analysts to the inevitable downsizing needed
to enhance competitiveness. It is possible that once again a surprise
mandate may force a course correction, but that mandate is more than
three months away. The intervening period can be one where the economy
and mass livelihoods suffer damage of a kind that can take too long
to repair.
|