Monday, June 13, 2005

Jobless Growth in todays Globalised World

Commenting on “Jobless Growth” The Finance Minister, Mr P Chidambaram, had this to say in his Budget Speech this year.

“In the last Budget, I had rejected the idea of jobless growth. As I unfold the vision of the UPA Government, Hon’ble Members will note that the central theme that runs through the various schemes and programmes is creation of jobs. Assured irrigation facilities to an additional 1 crore hectares of land over a period of five years will generate employment for an additional 1 crore people at the rate 1 person per hectare. The food processing industry is growing at a rate which generates 2.5 lakh jobs every year. The textile sector alone has the potential to create 1.2 crore jobs over the next 5 years. The information technology (IT) industry is expected to offer an additional 70 lakh jobs by 2009. Construction industry is also expected to throw up lakhs of jobs. Sectors with potential for generating employment will receive the highest attention of the Government.” This is what is called “reform with a human face”.

It is all very well to reject the idea of jobless growth, however, the ground realities need to be factored in. As per news reports, Mr Juan Somavia, director-general, International Labour Organisation (ILO), has said that the growing gap between wealth generation and job creation is becoming a serious threat to international security, development and democracy and needs to be addressed urgently. Further, the ILO chief said at the ILO’s 93rd International Labour Conference “This global jobs crisis is the most pressing political issue of our time,”. Illustrating the contrast between a healthy global growth rate of 5 pct and a disappointing expansion in employment of only 1.7 pct in 2004, Mr Somavia said, “World output increased by nearly $4 trillion, yet global unemployment was reduced by only 500,000.” The imbalance between globalisation and growth and job creation was illustrated by the fact that about 1.4 billion people are unemployed or considered working poor, with almost half the world’s labour force living on less than $2 per day.

In todays increasingly globalised world job growth is very much dependent upon external factors within each sector and cannot just be controlled by launching schemes within the national borders.

In the face of such challenges can India’s political and bureaucratic establishment rise up to the occasion and come up with innovative policies for the upliftment of the working class. We have to wait and see.

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