Content
- Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) Annual Report, 2025 [January, 2025 – December, 2025]
- Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha
Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) Annual Report, 2025 [January, 2025 – December, 2025]
Why in News?
- PLFS Annual Report 2025 (MoSPI) released; first calendar-year survey with revamped methodology, expanded sample (~2.7 lakh households) and higher-frequency labour market estimates.
Relevance
GS III (Economy)
- Employment, unemployment, and labour market indicators (LFPR, WPR, UR)
- Informal sector dominance and structural transformation
- Skill mismatch and human capital development
- Sectoral shift: agriculture → manufacturing → services
Practice Question
- “India’s labour market shows improving indicators but persistent structural weaknesses.” Analyse in light of PLFS 2025.(250 Words)
Static Background
- PLFS (since 2017, NSO) provides employment data using two approaches: Usual Status (365 days) and Current Weekly Status (7 days) for comprehensive labour analysis.
Core Indicators
- Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR): Percentage of population working or actively seeking/available for work; indicates labour market participation intensity.
- Worker Population Ratio (WPR): Percentage of population actually employed; reflects real job absorption capacity of the economy.
- Unemployment Rate (UR): Percentage of unemployed among labour force; excludes those not seeking jobs.
Key Findings & Data-Based Insights (PLFS 2025)
Labour Market Indicators
- LFPR at 59.3% (male 79.1%, female 40.0%), indicating stable participation but persistent gender gap driven by socio-cultural constraints and unpaid care burden.
- WPR at 57.4%, closely tracking LFPR, suggesting most labour force participants are employed, but quality of employment remains questionable.
- UR at 3.1%, marginal decline from 2024, indicating improved labour absorption but masking informal and low-productivity employment.
Youth & Educated Unemployment
- Youth unemployment declined to 9.9%, but urban youth unemployment remains high at 13.6%, reflecting structural skill mismatch and job market rigidity.
- Educated unemployment reduced to 6.5%, signalling modest improvement but persistent gaps in high-skill job creation and employability.
Employment Structure
- Regular salaried employment rose to 23.6%, indicating gradual formalisation, though still limited compared to developed economies.
- Self-employment declined to 56.2%, yet remains dominant, often reflecting disguised unemployment and subsistence activities.
Sectoral Shifts
- Agriculture share reduced to 43.0%, but still disproportionately high, indicating incomplete structural transformation.
- Manufacturing (12.1%) and services (13.1%) expanded, signalling slow transition towards non-farm employment.
Gender & Labour Dynamics
- Female wage growth outpaced male across categories (self-employed +8.8%, salaried +7.2%), indicating narrowing wage growth gap.
- Female labour force exclusion largely due to unpaid care (44.4%), highlighting structural gender barriers rather than lack of jobs.
Education & Skills
- Average schooling ~10 years, with urban-rural divide (~11 vs ~9.3 years), impacting productivity and job readiness.
- Vocational training extremely low (4.2%), indicating weak skilling ecosystem despite policy emphasis.
NEET & Workforce Size
- NEET (15–29 years) at ~25%, signalling major demographic risk and underutilisation of youth workforce.
- Total workforce ~61.6 crore, with stark gender disparity (41.6 crore male vs 20 crore female workers).
Analytical Overview
Economic
- Stable LFPR + low UR suggests employment generation exists, but dominance of self-employment reflects low productivity and informal economy trap.
- Structural shift aligns with Lewis dual-sector model, but slow pace limits industrial growth and income transformation.
Governance
- PLFS redesign improves data granularity, frequency, and policy relevance, enabling real-time labour monitoring.
- However, methodological changes reduce comparability, complicating long-term policy evaluation.
Social
- Gender gap in LFPR reflects patriarchal norms, safety issues, and unpaid work burden, not just labour demand constraints.
- High NEET levels indicate risk of demographic liability instead of dividend.
Human Capital
- Low vocational training confirms skill mismatch problem, consistent with Economic Survey observations.
- Education expansion without employability leads to educated unemployment paradox.
Challenges
- High informality despite rise in salaried jobs; social security coverage remains limited.
- Disguised unemployment in agriculture continues despite declining share.
- Urban labour market inefficiencies reflected in higher unemployment rates.
- Gender inequality in participation and working hours persists.
- Data comparability issues post-2025 redesign.
- Low skilling penetration undermines Industry 4.0 readiness.
Way Forward
- Promote labour-intensive manufacturing + MSMEs to absorb surplus workforce.
- Expand care economy (creches, maternity support) to improve female LFPR.
- Reform skilling ecosystem with industry-linked vocational training (dual model).
- Incentivise formalisation via EPFO/ESIC expansion and ease of compliance.
- Introduce urban employment schemes to tackle urban unemployment.
- Ensure data integration (PLFS + EPFO + GST) for real-time labour analytics.
Prelims Pointers
- LFPR includes employed + unemployed (seeking work); WPR includes only employed → key conceptual difference.
- UR excludes those not willing to work.
- PLFS shifted to calendar year (Jan–Dec) from 2025.
- Conducted by NSO under MoSPI.
- Sample size increased ~2.65 times in 2025 redesign.
Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha
Why in News?
- Jan Vishwas (Amendment of Provisions) Bill, 2026 introduced in Lok Sabha; proposes large-scale decriminalisation of minor offences to improve Ease of Doing Business and governance efficiency.
Relevance
GS II (Polity / Governance)
- Legal reforms and decriminalisation of minor offences
- Administrative reforms and ease of compliance
- Role of adjudicatory mechanisms and quasi-judicial bodies
GS III (Economy)
- Ease of Doing Business and regulatory environment
- Impact on investment climate and entrepreneurship
- Reduction of compliance burden and transaction costs
Practice Questions
- “Decriminalisation of minor offences is essential for improving governance and economic efficiency.” Discuss.(250 Words)
Static Background
- Decriminalisation reforms aim to replace criminal liability with civil penalties, reducing over-criminalisation and improving regulatory compliance environment.
- Builds on Jan Vishwas Act, 2023, which decriminalised 183 provisions across 42 Acts, marking shift toward trust-based governance and proportional regulation.
Key Provisions & Data-Based Highlights
Scale of Reform
- Amendment of 784 provisions across 79 Central Acts under 23 Ministries, making it one of India’s largest regulatory rationalisation exercises.
- 717 provisions decriminalised, reducing imprisonment clauses for procedural/technical defaults, signalling shift toward investor-friendly legal ecosystem.
Ease of Living Component
- 67 provisions amended in laws like Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 and NDMC Act, 1994, simplifying compliance and improving citizen service delivery.
- Focus on municipal taxation, vehicle compliance, reducing procedural complexity and transaction costs for individuals.
Nature of Decriminalisation
- Replacement of imprisonment with monetary penalties or warnings, especially for minor and technical violations.
- Introduction of graded penalties (warning → fine → higher penalty), ensuring proportionality and reducing excessive state coercion.
Institutional Mechanisms
- Provision for Adjudicating Officers and Appellate Authorities, enabling faster dispute resolution and reducing judicial burden.
- Strengthens administrative adjudication, aligning with principles of natural justice and efficiency.
Consultative Process
- Based on inter-ministerial consultations, NITI Aayog-led committees, industry bodies, civil society inputs, ensuring stakeholder-driven reforms.
- Select Committee (49 sittings) expanded scope, recommending decriminalisation across additional 62 Central Acts.
Analytical Overview
Constitutional / Legal
- Aligns with Article 21 (due process, proportionality) by avoiding excessive criminalisation for minor offences.
- Reflects principle of “minimum criminal law intervention”, endorsed in various Law Commission reports.
Governance / Administrative
- Reduces compliance burden, inspector raj, and rent-seeking, promoting transparent and predictable regulatory environment.
- Administrative adjudication improves speed, efficiency, and reduces pendency in courts.
Economic
- Enhances Ease of Doing Business, reduces fear of criminal liability, encouraging entrepreneurship and investment.
- Aligns with global best practices (OECD risk-based regulation), improving India’s attractiveness for global capital.
Social / Ethical
- Prevents criminalisation of citizens for minor procedural lapses, ensuring fairness and reducing harassment.
- Promotes trust-based governance, shifting state-citizen relationship from coercive to facilitative.
Institutional / Legal Reform Context
- Continuation of legal system modernisation, complementing reforms like commercial courts, IBC, faceless tax assessments.
Challenges
- Risk of regulatory dilution, where absence of criminal penalties may reduce deterrence in certain sectors (environment, labour safety).
- Administrative capacity constraints: adjudicating officers may face overload, affecting timely enforcement.
- Potential discretion misuse in penalty imposition without robust safeguards.
- Lack of uniform criteria for identifying “minor offences” may lead to inconsistencies.
- Concerns over federal implications if similar reforms not adopted by states.
Way Forward
- Develop clear classification framework for offences (minor vs serious) to ensure consistency.
- Strengthen capacity and training of adjudicating authorities for fair, transparent decisions.
- Integrate digital compliance systems to reduce human interface and discretion.
- Ensure sector-specific safeguards (e.g., environment, public safety) where criminal penalties remain necessary.
- Encourage states to adopt similar decriminalisation reforms for holistic regulatory improvement.
Prelims Pointers
- Bill proposes decriminalisation of 717 provisions and amendment of 784 provisions across 79 Acts.
- Introduced by Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
- Builds on Jan Vishwas Act, 2023.
- Introduces graded penalties and adjudication mechanisms.
- Focus includes Ease of Doing Business + Ease of Living.


