Why in the news?

  • In India, only around 42.6% of graduates are deemed employable- a figure that goes beyond mere statistics, revealing a deeper structural fault in the education-to-employment system.

Employability Crisis in India

  • What is it?: The employability crisis reflects a significant gap between the skills of the workforce and the requirements of the job market, leading to high unemployment and underemployment, especially among educated youth.
  • Causes of Employment Crisis:
    • Skill Mismatch: Graduates lack industry-relevant technical and soft skills, making large numbers unemployable.
      • About 80% of engineering graduates lack employable skills as per Mercer Mettl India Graduate Skill Index 2025.​
    • Educational Shortcomings: The outdated curriculum, poor integration of industry needs in education, and low focus on vocational training worsen the employability scenario.
      • NEP 2020 reforms have not fully addressed these issues.​
    • Economic Factors: Slow industrial growth and insufficient job creation in manufacturing limit opportunities.
      • The agriculture sector is seasonal and low productive, providing temporary employment to a large part of the workforce.​
    • Technological Disruption: Automation and artificial intelligence reduce traditional jobs and demand advanced skills, increasing unemployment risk for those not upskilled.
    • Labour Market Pressure: Rapid population growth adds millions of job seekers annually, intensifying competition in a job-scarce market.
      • Youth workforce entry is about 70-80 lakh per year.​
    • Barrier to Accessibility: Problems like caste discrimination, poor communication skills, and lack of transport particularly affect marginalized groups’ employability.
  • Impacts:
    • Unemployment Issues:
      • High educated unemployment, with statistics showing many engineering and professional graduates unable to find suitable jobs.
      • Female unemployment is notably high; about one in five educated women remain unemployed.
    • Economic Impacts:
      • Stunted growth of the industrial sector as well as its impact on GDP.
      • Wage stagnation for fresh graduates.
      • Low-quality jobs in informal sectors, and psychological stress leading to social issues.
    • Political Impacts:
      • Rising brunt of unemployability could lead to anti-government sentiments.
      • It could lead to emigration of unskilled labour to abroad.
  • Remedies and Way Forward:
    • Skill Development: Promote skill-building programs aligned with industry demands, including digital and technical skills in emerging sectors.​
    • Education Reform: Modernize curriculum, strengthen vocational training, foster industry-academia partnerships, and encourage practical learning.​
    • Boost Industrial Growth: Spur manufacturing and service sector expansion to create scalable job opportunities.​
    • Encourage Entrepreneurship: Promote startups, MSMEs, and provide easier access to finance to create self-employment opportunities.​
    • Technology Leverage: Use technology for job creation and facilitate lifelong learning and upskilling. And inclusion of AI and Machine Learning.
    • Policy Support: Government policies to incentivize job creation, support informal sector formalization, and strengthen social safety nets.
  • Initiatives of GoI:
    • Skill India Mission (2015): Umbrella for PMKVY, Jan Shikshan Sansthan, and National Skill Development Corporation.
    • National Education Policy (NEP) 2020: Emphasises experiential learning and industry linkages.
    • PM Vishwakarma Yojana: Upskilling traditional artisans.
    • Digital Skill Hubs and Gati Shakti Vishwavidyalayas: Promoting sector-specific skills (logistics, railways, etc.).
    • NAPS & NATS: Apprenticeship programmes integrating skill training with employment.

 

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