34 Lakh Salaried Indians Lost Their Jobs In April 2021; Unemployment Rate Touches 8%

34 Lakh Salaried Indians Lost Their Jobs In April, 2021; Unemployment Rate Touches 8%
34 Lakh Salaried Indians Lost Their Jobs In April, 2021; Unemployment Rate Touches 8%

During April, thirty-four lakh salaried Indians lost their jobs as small and medium scale enterprises are struggling to survive when the Covid second wave hit the country.

Small And Medium Scale Industry Affecting

The timing can be considered as the worst timing as the country is yet to fully recover from the pandemic’s first wave.

A total of 73.5 lakh jobs were lost in April causing the unemployment rate to rise to 7.97 per cent from 6.5 per cent in March, according to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), a private research group.

Further, the lockdowns and economic slowdown had devastated small enterprises in the rural areas, said the CMIE managing director Mahesh Vyas.

Vyas added, “Last year, the economy suffered a major shock. Before it fully recovered, the second wave of Covid caused significant shock yet again,”.

“If the economy bounces back very quickly and robustly, these enterprises may come back to life. But the outlook does not appear promising now,” Vyas said.

By the end of December 2020, India had 38.877 crore employed people counting both the organized and unorganised sectors.

Rural Areas Worst Impacted

Although, there is an improvement and the number rose to 40.07 crores by January-end.

But, it again fell to 39.821 crores by February, 39.814 crores by March and 39.079 crores by April-end.

Moreover, around 28.4 lakh salaried jobs were lost in the rural areas, while 5.6 lakh in the cities.

Hence, reducing the number of salaried employees from 4.6 crores in March to 4.544 crores in April.

On the other hand, the number of salaried in villages fell from 3.324 crores in February to 3.072 crores in March and to 2.788 crores in April.

Moving Towards Deeper Crisis

It doesn’t end here as the share of the lost salaried jobs among the total jobs lost was very high, and represented a “deeper crisis” according to the labor economist and retired JNU professor, Santosh Mehrotra.

Mehrotra said, “A section of the 73.5 lakh people who lost their jobs (in April) were agricultural workers who had just finished harvesting. They will resume working once the sowing season starts in June,”.

“But the 34 lakh who lost their salaried jobs are in a deeper crisis. They worked in small and medium industries that have closed their operations. Many of these units are unlikely to revive amid the economic slowdown,” Mehrotra added.

In the end, this report recommends additional government support to compensate the workers for their lost jobs and also offset the anticipated impact of the second wave.

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