Content
- Treat employment as a national priority
- India’s direction for disaster resilience
Treat employment as a national priority
Context and Background
- Demographic Advantage
- India is the world’s most populous and one of the youngest nations.
- By 2050, India’s average age will still be below 40.
- Over next 25 years, India will add 133 million working-age people (15–64 years) — ~18% of total global workforce increase.
- However, window of demographic dividend is short — expected to peak around 2043.
- Core Concern:
- Job creation not keeping pace with population growth.
- The challenge is not just quantity but quality and inclusivity of employment.
Relevance :
- GS II – Governance & Social Justice:
- Policy formulation for employment and livelihoods
- Centre-State coordination and institutional governance (Empowered Group of Secretaries, District Planning Committees)
- Gender and regional inclusion in policy design
- GS III – Economy & Labour:
- Employment as a driver of inclusive growth and economic resilience
- Formalisation of informal sector, MSME support, gig economy regulation
- Urban employment schemes and skill–industry linkages
Practice Question :
- India’s demographic dividend will remain unrealised unless employment creation becomes a national mission. Critically analyse the need for an Integrated National Employment Policy in this context.(250 Words)
Why Employment is Central to Growth
- Equity & Inclusion:
- Quality jobs reduce poverty, bridge regional/social disparities, and ensure inclusive growth.
- Economic Resilience:
- In a consumption-driven economy, higher employment → broader consumption → stable and accelerated GDP growth.
- Social Stability:
- Employment ensures dignity, curbs unrest, and reduces dependence on welfare transfers.
Structural Issues in India’s Employment Landscape
A. Lack of Unified Framework
- Despite multiple initiatives (Skill India, PMKVY, MGNREGA, NCS, etc.), India lacks a National Employment Policy (NEP) that aligns:
- Labour market supply (skills, education)
- Demand (sectoral growth, private investment)
- Social security and mobility systems
B. Labour Market Dualities
- Formal sector < 20% of total workforce; rest in informal/unorganised sector.
- Large urban–rural and gender gaps persist.
- Employability crisis: Many graduates remain jobless due to curriculum–industry mismatch.
C. Fragmented Governance
- Employment responsibilities spread across ministries (Labour, Skill Development, MSME, Rural Development, etc.), causing policy dilution and lack of accountability.
The Editorial’s Core Proposal: Integrated National Employment Policy (INEP)
Key Features Proposed:
- Integration and Coordination
- Consolidate all existing employment and livelihood schemes.
- Coordination among Centre, States, and industry stakeholders.
- Governance by an Empowered Group of Secretaries; District Planning Committees for local implementation.
- Time-bound Goals & Sector Targeting
- Define measurable outcomes (e.g., jobs per sector/year).
- Identify high-employment-potential sectors and align trade, industrial, and education policies.
- Tackle Labour Market Frictions
- Address regional disparities, gender barriers, skill mismatches.
- Promote labour mobility through a “One India” Employment Mobility Framework.
- Technology Integration
- Update skilling and curricula for AI, robotics, digital platforms, and Industry 4.0.
- Data and Evidence-Based Policy
- Establish real-time employment data systems to track labour trends and policy impact.
- Dedicated task force to improve data quality, timeliness, and coverage of informal sectors.
Sectoral Priorities for Job Creation
A. Labour-Intensive Sectors
- Textiles, Tourism, Agro-processing, Real Estate, Healthcare — absorb low-to-mid-skilled labour.
- Require ease of doing business reforms, credit access, export incentives, and logistics improvements.
B. MSME Sector
- Employs ~25 crore people.
- Needs integrated support: Finance + Technology + Skilling + Market access.
- Encourage cluster-based industrialisation and digital adoption.
C. Gig and Platform Economy
- Current size: 80 lakh–1.8 crore workers; projected to reach 9 crore by 2030.
- Spread to Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities.
- Requires:
- National Gig Economy Policy
- Centralised worker registry for easy onboarding, work history, and social security
- Fair contracts, safety norms, grievance redress mechanisms
D. Urban Employment
- Proposes an Urban Employment Guarantee Scheme (UEGS) in pilot cities — similar to MGNREGA, to reduce urban distress.
E. Women’s Labour Force Participation
- Strategies:
- Employment Linked Incentives (ELI) for companies hiring women.
- Formalisation of Anganwadi/ASHA workers.
- Investment in childcare & eldercare infrastructure.
- Social campaigns to counter patriarchal work restrictions.
Institutional and Policy Reforms Needed
- Implement Four Labour Codes (Wages, Industrial Relations, Social Security, Occupational Safety):
- With clear transition support to businesses.
- Simplify compliance, reduce litigation, and formalise jobs.
- Strengthen Skill–Industry Linkages
- Make college curricula employment-oriented; promote dual apprenticeship models.
- Align Skill India and PMKVY 4.0 with emerging sectors (EVs, semiconductors, renewables, digital services).
- Promote Regional Balance
- Focus on 100 most underdeveloped districts for targeted employment missions.
- Incentivise BPOs, remote work centres, and rural internships to decentralise opportunities.
- Infrastructure for Workforce
- Affordable housing near industrial zones.
- Transport connectivity for labour mobility.
- Digital public infrastructure for job-matching and benefits delivery.
Need for Better Employment Data
- Present data (e.g., PLFS, CMIE) suffer from lag and under-coverage of informal sector.
- Suggestion:
- Create National Employment Data System under NSSO/NSO.
- Use real-time data from EPFO, e-Shram, NCS platforms.
- Improve granularity — by district, gender, and occupation.
Strategic Linkage: Viksit Bharat 2047 & CII Vision
- CII’s “Policies for a Competitive India” Report:
- Employment generation is a pillar of competitiveness and inclusive growth.
- Integrated employment policy aligns with India’s vision of “Viksit Bharat @2047.”
Critical Appraisal
Strengths:
- Holistic — covers demand, supply, and institutional aspects.
- Integrates technology, gender, and regional balance.
- Pragmatic — focuses on both formal and gig sectors.
Limitations:
- Implementation depends heavily on Centre–State coordination and bureaucratic capacity.
- Labour codes still face political resistance and compliance costs for MSMEs.
- Urban employment guarantee pilot could face fiscal sustainability issues.
- Does not address agricultural underemployment comprehensively.
India’s direction for disaster resilience
Context and Overview
- India is a vast, multi-hazard country, prone to:
- Heatwaves and extreme temperatures
- Cyclones and floods
- Landslides and glacial lake outburst floods
- Forest fires and urban waterlogging
- Governance Framework:
- Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA): Overall coordination and implementation
- National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA): Policy, planning, and capacity building
- Guiding Principle: Prime Minister’s Ten Point Agenda on Disaster Risk Reduction (2016)
- DRR in India is multi-phase:
- Pre-disaster: Preparedness, capacity building, mitigation
- Post-disaster: Response, reconstruction
Relevance
- GS II – Governance & Disaster Management:
- Institutional roles of MHA, NDMA, State authorities
- Multi-level disaster governance (Centre–State, inter-ministerial committees)
- Pre-disaster and post-disaster planning
- GS III – Environment & Disaster Management:
- Climate resilience, extreme weather events, and nature-based solutions (NbS)
- Early warning systems, urban flood mitigation, glacial lake monitoring
- Finance-linked DRR (15th Finance Commission allocation)
Practice Question:
“India’s disaster management strategy has evolved from reactive relief to proactive risk reduction.” Analyse the role of pre-disaster mitigation, community capacity building, and technology integration in building resilience against multi-hazard risks. How can India’s international cooperation enhance its disaster preparedness and response? (250 Words)
Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) Financing
- 15th Finance Commission (2021–26): ₹2.28 lakh crore allocated for DRR over five years (~$30 billion).
- Allocation Split:
- Pre-disaster (30%):
- Preparedness & capacity building: 10%
- Mitigation: 20%
- Post-disaster (70%):
- Response: 40%
- Reconstruction: 30%
- Pre-disaster (30%):
- Significance: Shifts focus from reactive relief to proactive risk reduction, leveraging technology and local capacities.
Pre-Disaster Initiatives
A. Preparedness & Capacity Building
- Fire Safety Modernisation: ₹5,000 crore allocated.
- Volunteer Networks:
- Apda Mitra and Yuva Apda Mitra: 2.5 lakh volunteers each.
- Training & Research:
- National Institute of Disaster Management (NIDM): 36-stream standard disaster management course.
- Geo-spatial labs and faculty-led, action-oriented research.
B. Mitigation (20% of Pre-Disaster Funds)
- Innovative projects (~₹10,000 crore approved) focus on:
- Nature-based solutions for climate and disaster resilience
- Slope stabilization using bio-engineering
- Urban flood mitigation through green spaces and waterbody rejuvenation
- Glacial lake monitoring with remote sensing and automated weather stations
- Forest fire management via fuel evacuation and break lines
- Precursor Programme:
- National Cyclone Mitigation Programme (2011–22, ₹5,000 crore) reduced coastal vulnerability with:
- 7-day early warning systems
- Cyclone shelters and embankments
- National Cyclone Mitigation Programme (2011–22, ₹5,000 crore) reduced coastal vulnerability with:
Post-Disaster Measures
- Reconstruction packages approved (~₹5,000 crore) in States:
- Uttarakhand, Himachal Pradesh, Sikkim, Assam, Kerala
- Scientific damage assessments conducted for extreme rainfall events.
- Budget-to-Project Pipeline:
- Centre-State and inter-ministerial appraisal committees
- Ensures proper use of funds and accountability
Key Infrastructure and Technology
- Early Warning Systems:
- Multi-media Common Alerting Protocol delivers hazard alerts in local languages
- Automated weather stations, glacial lake monitoring, and flood early warnings
- Community Capacity Building:
- 327-member network of universities
- NDRF Academy, National Fire Service College, NIDM for training public servants
- Mock exercises, school safety programs, hazard awareness campaigns
- Nature-Based Solutions:
- Restoration of beels along Brahmaputra
- Urban green spaces and waterbody revitalization
- Slope stabilization and bio-engineering
International Coordination
- India leads and participates in DRR globally:
- Coalition for Disaster Resilient Infrastructure (CDRI)
- Engagements in G20, SCO, BIMSTEC, IORA
- Exchanges knowledge and implements innovative, sustainable DRR solutions.
Strategic Approach and Highlights
- Multi-Faceted Approach: Pre- and post-disaster, mitigation, preparedness, capacity building, and reconstruction.
- Nature-Based Solutions (NbS):
- Long-term climate adaptation, ecosystem restoration, hazard risk reduction.
- Community & Institutional Strengthening:
- Volunteer mobilisation, training, and research
- Panchayat-level integration for local DRR mainstreaming
- Technology Integration:
- Remote sensing, early warning systems, geospatial monitoring, digital alert platforms
- Financing Innovation:
- Dedicated Finance Commission allocation ensures structured risk management, moving away from ad hoc post-disaster debt funding.
Achievements and Impact
- Mitigation Projects: ₹10,000 crore in 1 year; focus on nature-based solutions.
- Reconstruction Packages: ₹5,000 crore approved for five states.
- Capacity Building: Large-scale volunteer networks and NIDM programs institutionalised.
- Coastal Cyclone Resilience: Reduced casualties via shelters and early warning systems.
- Urban & Rural Preparedness: Waterbody rejuvenation, green space development, slope stabilization, forest fire prevention.
Key Takeaways
- India is moving from reactive disaster response to proactive, integrated DRR.
- Finance Commission-led DRR funding ensures structured, risk-informed budgeting.
- Prevention, mitigation, preparedness, and capacity building are now core components of national disaster strategy.
- Community, technology, and nature-based solutions are central to risk reduction.
- International cooperation positions India as a global leader in DRR policy and practice.