Employment and the Pattern of Growth
Oct 8th 2008, C.P. Chandrasekhar & Jayati Ghosh
A much discussed aspect of post-reform industrial performance is the stagnation of employment in the organised manufacturing sector, despite high rates of output growth. The authors examine this performance and relate this to the composition of growth in the registered manufacturing sector, and suggest that demand-side factors may have an important explanatory role.
Implementing the NREGS
Sep 24th 2008, C.P. Chandrasekhar & Jayati Ghosh
Despite many problems, the enormous potential of the NREGS to generate more employment directly and indirectly as well as to transform rural economic and social relations is already evident in some states and districts. In this article, the authors examine the official evidence on implementation thus far.
Public Health on The Cheap 
Aug 1st 2008, Jayati Ghosh
Government policy in the social sectors in India clearly relies heavily on the unpaid or underpaid labour of women. These women often perform essential and demanding tasks that typically amount to full-time work, but are not given the status of regular government employees, and paid wages that fall below the minimum wages.
Bread, Circuses and The Media 
Jun 6 th 2008, Jayati Ghosh
The obsession of the media with the middle classes in urban areas means that issues related to the working class and rural population often gets inadequate coverage. When serious issues like worsening labour conditions in a big growing city like Delhi goes unnoticed despite a major strike to protest the same, the role of the media in bringing to our attention the realities of India cannot but be questioned.
 
The Crisis of Home-based Work 
May 17th 2008, Jayati Ghosh
Recent data on employment shows that the share of women working in manufacturing in a subsidiary capacity has been increasing continuously since 1987-88. This shows the increase in “putting out” home-based or other work as part of a subcontracting system for export and domestic manufacturing, which are not included in official employment statistics. These are often on piece rate basis, usually very poorly paid and without any known non-wage benefits
 
The Impact of Macroeconomic Change on Employment in the Retail Sector in India: Policy Implications for Growth, Sectoral Change and Employment 
May 15th 2008, Jayati Ghosh, Amitayu Sengupta & Anamitra Roychoudhury
This study is concerned with the employment situation in India’s retail sector. High economic growth in India has not produced satisfactory outcomes of job growth, both in terms of quantity and quality. Concern has arisen that many of the working poor engaged in small-scale retailing and street vending are crowded by entries of large-scale domestic as well as foreign retailers. Share of workers’ income in manufacturing has also seen a decline, despite labour productivity growth, during the last decade. This paper argues that economic policy in India needs to be made more inclusive and equitable. The only sure way of doing so would be making it more pro-job and pro-poor, through examining employment implications of macro policies that accompany economic liberalization.
 
Recent Growth in West Bengal
May 12th 2008, C. P. Chandrasekhar & Jayati Ghosh
The state of West Bengal has been the focus of national discussion because of the various implications of its proposed industrialisation policy. In this article the authors consider the background to this policy by analysing the most recent available evidence on growth trends in West Bengal.
 
The NREGA and its Critics
Mar 10th 2008, Jayati Ghosh
Contrary to the media criticism of NREGPA based on the recent CAG draft report on grounds of leakages, widespread corruption, inability to reach beneficiaries and create useful assets, the CAG Report has actually pointed out that the shortage of administrative and technical staff has prevented the programme from doing what it was supposed to do to the full extent The report also highlights the urgent need to ensure more administrative assistance for the programme at all levels.
 
Dealing with Short-Term Migration
Oct 4th 2007, C. P. Chandrasekhar & Jayati Ghosh
Short-term migration for work has evidently increased rapidly in recent times in India, but our statistical systems are currently not adequate to capture such flows of labour. In this edition of MacroScan, C. P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh discuss the limitations of the existing data, the tendencies that do emerge and the policy implications of short-term economic migration.
 
Social Security Benefits and the New Pension Scheme
Sep 29th 2007, Ratan Khasnabis
The New Pension Scheme (NPS) is radically different from the existing scheme that ensures a defined benefit from the employee without asking for a collateral contribution. Therefore social security in the form of defined benefit is a right which is being denied by the very concept of NPS. Secondly, the article argues that there are problems with the expected return of an equity-linked financial instrument which the NPS attempts to be as there is no guarantee that the returns from equities would always be better than the guaranteed returns.
 
Jobless Growth in Chinese Manufacturing
May 15th 2007, C.P Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
While China is increasingly seen as “the workshop of the world” and there are fears of relocative shifts in manufacturing output and employment away from other countries to China, the recent pattern of manufacturing growth appears to have been characterised by declining employment. In this paper, the authors investigate the trends in manufacturing employment in China and consider the reasons for this paradox.
 
Is Contract Farming Really the Solution for Indian Agriculture?
May 15th 2007, Jayati Ghosh
Even the contract farming experience in Punjab, which is generally considered successful, shows that contract farming holds numerous problems for agriculture in developing countries like India. If contract framing is to improve the condition of cultivators rather than intensify the ongoing agrarian crisis, it is important to have a system of state regulation, intermediation and monitoring of contract farming practices to ensure the interests of farmers.
 
The Progress of "Reform" and the Retrogression of Agriculture
Apr 25th 2007, C. P. Chandrasekhar
The consequence of recent structural shifts is that the Indian economy can record the observed creditable rates of non-inflationary growth of aggregate GDP even when its agricultural sector languishes. It appears that a feature of the growth process in a more open and liberalised environment is that the peasantry has a much smaller a role in sustaining economic growth and can thus be partially excluded from development. What is disconcerting is that the self-correcting mechanism that existed in the earlier period to restore a semblance of balance between agricultural and non-agricultural growth are no more operative.
 
A Model of Growth of the Contemporary Indian Economy  
Apr 10th 2007, Prabhat Patnaik
This paper provides a simple model of the current pattern of India's economic growth process, to reckon with the fact that even an accelerating growth rate may leave the unemployment problem completely unresolved, or even accentuated, as labour productivity rises at a faster rate than investment. An obvious conclusion that emerges is that the widely-held perception that higher and higher growth rates would eventually eradicate unemployment in the country, is untenable.
 
Recent Employment Trends in India and China: An Unfortunate Convergence?
Apr 5th 2007,C. P. Chandrasekhar & Jayati Ghosh
This paper argues that both China and India, despite the similarity of the current international hype about their future economic prospects and also despite their obvious differences, face rather similar economic problems at present with respect to the labour market. In both countries, the strategy of development is delivering relatively high growth without commensurate increases in employment, especially in the organised sector; and the bulk of new employment is in lower productivity activities under uncertain and often oppressive conditions. It is argued that this paradox may be a common result of the similar strategy of economic expansion currently being followed in both countries.
 
Self-employment as Opportunity or Challenge
Mar 30th 2007, C.P Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
The enormous increase in the proportion and number of self-employed workers in India in recent years is still not adequately analysed. This paper looks at the conditions of self-employment in terms of perceptions of remuneration and work intensity. It is shown that the rising trend of self-employment reflects the precarious conditions of labour markets in India, where paid employment is simply not increasing fast enough to meet the needs of the growing labour force.
 
Some Aspects of the Well-Being of India's Agricultural Labour in the Context of Contemporary Agrarian Crisis 
Feb 22nd 2007, Praveen Jha
The tremendous economic pressure that the Indian countryside has come under in the recent years is bound to impact the well-being of the masses in the rural economy. This paper is an attempt to examine the key elements of the contemporary agrarian crisis and its possible consequences for agricultural labourers. It appears that their economic conditions, in any case quite fragile and vulnerable even in 'better' times, have taken quite a battering in the recent years.
 
Singur and the Political Economy of Structural Change
Feb 17th 2007, Mritiunjoy Mohanty
The paper explores the controversy that has surrounded the West Bengal Government's land acquisition programme in Singur and situates it within the overall context of economic growth and transformation. It argues one of the most adversely affected groups as a result of the acquisition is relatively large farmers for whom agriculture is a source of accumulation and not livelihood and subsistence. This might explain in part why the resistance has been so strong. The paper argues that equitable and sustained growth is possible only by reducing the share of agriculture in the labour force and therefore that the West Bengal Government's strategy has to focus on maximising the generation of non-farm rural employment.
 
Women Workers in Urban India
Feb 6th 2007, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
The most recent data on employment suggest that employment growth in the first half of this decade has been rapid among urban women. This paper investigates the changing patterns of women's paid work in urban India and questions whether or not these trends can be seen as a sign of a vibrant dynamic economy undergoing positive structural transformation.
 
Growth, Employment and Technology
Feb 5th 2007, Jayati Ghosh
There is a strong case for evolving a growth strategy that allows and encourages labour productivity increases overall, while significantly expanding expenditure in social sectors that positively affect the conditions of life of most citizens. This in turn requires a major role for state intervention, through direct public investment and through fiscal, monetary and market-based measures that alter the structure of incentives for private agents.
 
Growth and Employment in Organised Industry 
Jan 30th 2007, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
 
The rapid growth of output of organised industry is a frequently cited indicator of India's current phase of dynamic growth. Yet such expansion has not been accompanied by employment growth along the lines expected. This paper considers the nature of recent growth in organised industry and the reasons why it has not generated more employment.
 
Poverty and Neo-liberalism in India
Jan 6th 2007, Utsa Patnaik
 
This paper explores why the official poverty estimates show low levels as well as decline in poverty in India over the 1990s, whereas all other economic and social indicators suggest that absolute poverty is high. The former do not capture the true picture because the official method involves the 'fallacy of equivocation'. It is also argued that when actual rural poverty is as high as nearly four-fifths of the population and poverty depth is increasing with a higher proportion of people being pushed down into lower nutritional status, there is an urgent need to revert to a demand-driven universal public distribution system.
 
Being Your Own Boss
Dec 18th 2006, Jayati Ghosh
Around half of the work force in India currently does not work for a direct employer not only in agriculture, but increasingly in a wide range of non-agricultural activities. This significance of self-employment brings home the urgent need to consider basic social security that covers not just hired workers in the unorganised sector, but also those who typically work for themselves.
 
The Jobless Young
Dec 8th 2006, Jayati Ghosh
The arguments about the economic benefits that a demographic bulge can provide India become invalid against the backdrop of the latest NSS data on employment and unemployment. The growing numbers of young unemployed given by the recent data suggest that the potential advantages of a demographic dividend will be outweighed by social instability.
 
Resources for Equitable Growth
Dec 7th 2006, Economic Research Foundation
The declared aims of the Planning Commission's Approach to the XIth Plan, all of which require substantially increased public expenditure in physical infrastructure and social sectors, simply cannot be met within the confines of a restrictive fiscal policy stance. The need to rethink policies of resource generation and financial regulation is therefore urgent. In this context, this paper, presented to the National Commission on Enterprises in the Informal Sector, seeks to examine the effects of the three perceptions underlying the prevailing fiscal conservatism, questions their validity and offers some alternatives for mobilising resources for development.
 
Working More for Less
Nov 28th 2006, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
In a previous article analysing the latest NSS large survey on employment, it was noted that the recent employment growth has been dominated by self employment for men and self employment plus regular work for women. In this article, the authors investigate the conditions of employment, in particular remuneration for work. It is found that a large part of the increase in self-employment is a distress-driven phenomenon, led by the inability to find adequately gainful paid employment.
 
Employment Growth: The Latest Trends
Nov 17th 2006, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
The results of the latest large sample survey, the 61st Round of the NSSO, on employment and unemployment have just been released. They suggest that there have been significant changes in the pattern of employment over the past five years. In the first of a set of articles, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh consider the broad employment trends in urban and rural India. Subsequent articles will deal with the conditions of employment, average wages, unemployment and specific issues relating to employment among the young population.
 
Social Inequality, Labour Market Dynamics and the Need for Expanding Reservation - Some Issues for Consideration
Sep 5th 2006, Mritiunjoy Mohanty
This paper brings two new elements to the debate around expanding reservation in centres of excellence in higher education. First, it establishes that Upper Caste Hindus are significantly better off in education, employment and relative incomes than ST, SC or OBC populations. Second, it links this privileged positioning of Upper Castes Hindus with changing labour market dynamics in the 1990s and shows how Upper Caste Hindus dominate the best jobs in the Urban economy. Since access to high quality tertiary education then becomes key to accessing the most dynamic segment of a decelerating labour market, the paper therefore argues that expanding reservations to OBCs in public institutions of higher learning is imperative.
 
The Need to Protect Petty Production
Jul 17th 2006, Prabhat Patnaik
This paper argues that in a situation where unemployment is generated through the disappearance of small-scale production, the ''efficiency'' argument in favour of their closure does not stand, even if small-scale units are more inefficient at the micro-level. The destruction of petty production through exposure to liberal trade, in the name of efficiency, is therefore an undesirable course of action.
 
Providing Social Security to Unorganised Workers
Jun 26th 2006, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh
The lack of provision of basic social security for the vast bulk of workers in India is one of the more depressing features of Indian society. This is sought to be corrected in the recent recommendations of the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector. In this paper, the authors consider the main proposals in the Report and the associated legislation that will be required, and argue that this must become a priority issue for the government.
 
The Children of Migrant Workers
Jun 3rd 2006, Jayati Ghosh
Given the dangers involved in allowing the neglect of migrant workers to continue, it is absolutely imperative for both society at large and government policy in particular, to make the issue of basic protection for migrant families and the provision of public services and systems for migrants, including children, a basic priority.
 
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