‘Young India has Virat Kohli mentality, but we are not reaping benefits of demographic dividend’: Rajan
The former RBI governor said we are losing the demographic dividend because we are not giving our young people jobs - unemployment numbers are high, disguised unemployment is even higher
India is not reaping the benefits of its demographic dividend, former RBI governor Raghuram Rajan said on Tuesday (April 16), emphasising that there is need to focus on improving the human capital and enhancing their skill sets.
“I think we are in the midst of it (demographic dividend), but the problem is we are not reaping the benefits,” Rajan said at a conference on “Making India an Advanced Economy by 2047: What Will it Take” at the George Washington University in Washington, US.
Lack of jobs
“That's why I said 6 per cent growth. If you think that's about what we are right now, take away the fluff in the GDP numbers. That 6 per cent is in the midst of a demographic dividend. It is much below where China and Korea were when they reaped their demographic dividend. And that's why I'm saying we are being overly optimistic when we say this is great. This is because we are losing the demographic dividend because we are not giving those guys jobs,” the former RBI governor said.
‘How to create jobs?’
“And that leads us to the question, how do we create those jobs? The answer to my mind is partly enhancing the capabilities of the people we have, partly changing the nature of the jobs that are available, and we need to work on both fronts,” he said.
“This idea of apprenticeship, which the Congress has in its manifesto is worth working on. I think there's a lot that needs to be done to make it effective, but we need many more students to at least be capable of doing a good job,” Rajan said, adding that there also needs to be focus on job creation.
Critical of subsidies for chip manufacturing
Rajan was critical of India spending billions of dollars on chip manufacturing.
“Think about these chip factories. So many billions going to subsidise chip manufacturing,” he said, adding that a number of job-intensive areas like leather are not doing good.
“We are going down in those areas. No wonder we have more of a job problem. The job problem was not created in the last 10 years. It's been growing over the last few decades. But if you neglect the areas which are more labour-intensive - I'm not saying we need to now offer subsidies to leather - but figure out what's going wrong there and try and rectify that,” he said.
Indian innovators going to Singapore, Silicon Valley
Responding to a question, Rajan said a lot of Indian innovators now are going to Singapore or to Silicon Valley to set up because they find access to the final markets much easier there.
“We need to ask what is it that forces them to go outside of India to set up rather than stay inside India? But what is really heartwarming is talking to some of these entrepreneurs and seeing their desire to change the world and increasingly many of them are not happy staying in India,” he said.
“They want to actually expand more globally. I think there is a young India that has a Virat Kohli mentality. I'm second to none in the world,” Rajan said.
India’s problem – unemployment
Earlier in his presentation, Rajan said regardless of whether one picks services, manufacturing, agriculture, or construction, India has a problem.
“And this is so well known, I don't need to elaborate. Unemployment numbers are high, disguised unemployment is even higher, labour force participation is low, female labour force participation is really alarmingly low…the share of agriculture and jobs is increasing in recent times. Of course, all this is exhibited in highly-educated unemployment and massive numbers of people applying for government jobs. PhDs applying for jobs as peons in railways,” he said.
“Even as this is happening, even as we have a massive labour force which is unemployed, we have the capital intensity of manufacturing steadily going up,” Rajan said.
(With agency inputs)