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India Needs To Create 115 Million Jobs By 2030, Research Shows

India needs to create 115 million jobs by 2030 as more people enter the workforce, a study showed, suggesting the South Asian nation has to boost services and manufacturing to keep the economy expanding.

India Needs to Create 115 Million Jobs by 2030, Research Shows
India Needs to Create 115 Million Jobs by 2030, Research Shows

India needs to create 115 million jobs by 2030 as more people enter the workforce, a study showed, suggesting the South Asian nation has to boost services and manufacturing to keep the economy expanding.

Asia’s third largest economy will need to generate 16.5 million jobs each year, up from 12.4 million annually in the last decade, Trinh Nguyen, a senior economist at Natixis SA, wrote in a report Monday. About 10.4 million jobs will need to be from the formal sector, she added. 

“To achieve this herculean task, India’s growth engine needs to fire on all cylinders, from manufacturing to services in the next five years,” she said in a research note. 

While India’s economy is expected to grow more than 7% this year — among the fastest in the world, the pace is still not rapid enough to create jobs for its 1.4 billion people. High youth unemployment is a challenge for Prime Minister Narendra Modi as he seeks an unprecedented third term in office in the ongoing national elections.

Read more: Booming India Prepares to Take China’s Global Growth Crown

Despite India’s economy generating 112 million jobs over the last decade, only about 10% of jobs are formal, Nguyen wrote. The country’s overall labor force participation rate stands at 58%, much lower than its Asian peers, according to the World Bank.  

Nguyen said India’s services sector, which makes up more than half of the gross domestic product, has limited scope in terms of headcount and quality of labor. This means India can tap into the manufacturing sector and compete for firms and countries actively looking to diversify from a China-centric supply chain, she added.

“The incoming administration needs to jump on the manufacturing train and capitalize on demographic and geopolitical tailwinds,” she said in the note. “Even if the road forward is challenging, it is never too late to walk down the right path.”

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