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Three cities, 36 workers, the same story: Even daily jobs are now hard to find
A new series on availability of work and trends in wages based
on interviews with 12 workers each in Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai.
“Have you come here to get us work?” Monu Raikwad asked a Scroll.in reporter
one cold February morning. The scrawny 28-year-old man was squatting
among a group of people on the periphery of a park in Delhi’s Subhash
Nagar that serves as a labour naka – a place where daily wage workers
assemble every morning in the hope of finding assignments. If they were
lucky, they could find work as masons or painters at construction sites
or as porters lifting materials. Hired and paid on a daily basis, the
workers, most of whom are rural migrants, lead a precarious existence in
the best of times.
How has life changed for them since
2014? In May that year, a new government led by the Bharatiya Janata
Party came to power under Prime Minister Narendra Modi. One of his main
election promises was to give “high priority to job creation”.
Four years later, in the absence of regular and reliable data on
employment in India, his government’s performance on that count is the
subject of heated debate among economists and commentators.
But, among the most vulnerable workers in urban India, there appears to be startling consensus: both work and incomes are down. Scroll.in
reporters in three cities – Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai – visited labour
nakas in February, asking 12 workers in each city the same set of
questions about availability of work and trends in wages.
The
workers were aged between 23-62 years and most of them did
construction-related jobs. Barring two, all the workers were male.
All
36 workers across the three cities reported getting fewer days of work
since 2014, with most identifying 2016 as the year when work dried up.
While the daily wages had increased, the reduced number of workdays
meant that 32 workers reported a drop in monthly income. They said they
could no longer afford to buy milk, vegetables and a host of essentials.
Why has work shrunk?
As
many as 23 workers attributed the drop in workdays to Modi’s decision
in November 2016 to demonetise high-value bank notes. Overnight, 86% of
India’s currency was made illegal. With new notes taking long to enter
the system, the liquidity crunch paralysed economic activity for months.
Among the worst-hit sectors was construction, which is India’s largest
employer of workers after agriculture. While the latest GDP data
has shown a slight recovery in the construction sector in the third
quarter of 2017-’18, conversations with workers indicate the
after-effects of demonetisation persist.
Seven
workers identified the Goods and Services Tax as one of the factors
responsible for their economic hardship. Introduced in July 2017, the
GST replaced all other indirect taxes in India with the aim of
simplifying taxation and boosting inter-state trade. However, the
implementation of GST has been marked by confusion, complicated slabs,
arbitrary changes and delayed refunds. This has hurt businesses.
While
demonetisation and GST were common factors cited across all three
cities, some workers highlighted local factors too. In Delhi, two
workers said the move by civic authorities to seal unauthorised
structures had dampened the construction sector. In Chennai and Mumbai,
four workers blamed migrants from other states for their economic
hardship.
In
Chennai, eight workers attributed the shortage of work to the “sand
problem”. In November 2017, the Madras High Court banned illegal sand
mining in the state, which workers said had brought construction work to
a standstill. Three workers interviewed by Scroll.in reduced
all these factors to one event: the death of Amma, as J Jayalalithaa,
the former chief minister who died in 2016 was popularly known.
The
other political leader who featured in the interviews was Prime
Minister Modi – three workers blamed him for their drop in workdays.
How does this fit into the larger picture?
India’s data on employment levels in the economy takes a little time to generate.
Since
the 1970s, the National Sample Survey Office under the Ministry of
Statistics and Programme Implementation has conducted an
Employment-Unemployment Survey in households every five years. Since the
data is collected at homes and not workplaces, it reflects employment
levels in both the formal and informal economy. The last NSSO survey was
done in 2011-’12. It pegged the unemployment rate at 27%, up from 18%
in 2004-’05.
This five-yearly exercise has since been
replaced by a Periodic Labour Force Survey, which will be conducted
annually. The first round began in April 2017. The results are unlikely
to be released before the end of 2018.
To generate more
timely data on employment, since 2010, the Labour Bureau of the Ministry
of Labour and Employment has been conducting annual household surveys,
which ask fewer questions than the National Sample Survey Office but
have a comparable, if not larger sample size.
In a
response to a question in the Lok Sabha on March 3, 2018, however, the
minister of state for labour and employment, Santosh Kumar Gangwar, said
these annual surveys had been discontinued.
Despite this, economists say there is enough evidence to show that employment growth in India has slowed down.
Combining
data from the Labour Bureau’s annual surveys with the NSSO surveys,
Santosh Mehrotra, a professor of economics at the Jawaharlal Nehru
University’s Centre for Informal Sector and Labour Studies, estimated
that the annual number of people leaving agriculture slowed down from
five million between 2004-’05 and 2011-’12 to just one million between
2011-’12 to 2015-’16. “For the first time in India’s history, after
2004-’05, the absolute numbers in agriculture had begun to fall, because
people were finding work in construction in both rural as well as urban
areas,” he said.
Jayan Jose Thomas who teaches
economics at the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, said even this
employment growth was not enough to absorb the rising number of people
entering the workforce every year, and most of the new jobs were
low-value ones. “But it still served a purpose in reducing poverty,” he
said. Now, he said, “all indications suggest that even this may have
slowed down”.
Mehrotra said construction has slowed down
because a sluggishness in the economy. “Investment is down, capacity
utilisation is down, credit offtake is down, exports are down,” he said.
“In this situation, how would jobs get created?”
He said the worker interviews done by Scroll.in reporters were “very consistent” with the larger trends in the economy.
Vijayabaskar,
a professor at the Madras Institute of Development Studies, agreed.
“Given the fact that the bulk of employment outside agriculture was
generated in the construction sector in the last 15 years, it is not
surprising that people are reporting a decline in employment,” he said.
In his fieldwork in rural areas, he often comes across people who have
returned from the cities because they are no longer able to find work in
construction. “They cannot afford to stay,” he said. “You don’t even
get to see them in the cities.”
A painter waiting for work at the labour naka outside the Khar railway station in Mumbai. Photo: Shone SatheeshDemonetisation
came as a further shock to an economy that was already slowing down,
say economists. Given the low frequency of the household employment
surveys, however, there is inadequate data on the trends in the labour
market since 2016.
Apart from the household surveys, the
Labour Bureau also conducts Quarterly Quick Employment Surveys that
measure employment in eight sectors of industry and services by
surveying enterprises with more than 10 workers. These surveys show the
net jobs created in eight sectors of the Indian economy declined sharply
from 10 lakh in 2011-’12 to just 1.35 lakh in 2015-’16. “Earlier, we
were creating 10% of the jobs needed to absorb the net addition to the
workforce,” said Praveen Jha of the Jawaharlal Nehru University’s Centre
for Economic Studies and Planning. “But now creating just 1% of the
requirement.”
Since
the enterprises covered in the quarterly surveys constitute just 1.4%
of the total number of establishments in India, many have questioned
whether they are truly representative. The daily wage workers
interviewed by Scroll.in, for instance, are unlikely to feature in such enterprise surveys, which do not capture the picture in the unorganised sector.
But
economists say there are other ways to estimate the trends among
informal workers. Mehrotra pointed out that in the aftermath of
demonetisation, there was a sharp increase in work demanded under the
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee, which guarantees 100
days of work to every rural family that demands employment, within 15
days of their demand and within 5 km of where they live. “On November 7,
2016, the person-days demanded was 34 lakh across the country,” he
said. “By December 12, that had jumped to 50 lakh, and by the beginning
of January, to 82 lakh. These workers had been laid off from informal
work in cities, and were returning to their villages to safety and in
search of livelihoods.”
Asked
about the losses suffered by workers in the unorganised sector due to
demonetisation, the minister of state for labour and employment, Santosh
Gangwar, said in a response in the Lok Sabha on March 3: “Employment
in unorganised sector depends on variety of factors and it is difficult
to pin-point the degree of impact of demonetisation thereon. There is no
such input available with this ministry.”
Another
dataset that captures trends in urban employment is the Consumer
Confidence Survey done by the Reserve Bank of India every month in six
metropolitan cities. The surveys, which cover about 5,000 respondents,
show rising pessimism about urban employment.
Vinoj Abraham, who teaches economics at the Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram, wrote in theEconomic and Political Weekly
that all sources of data – the Labour Bureau’s annual and quarterly
surveys – show a slowdown in employment growth between 2012 to 2016.
“Much of the employment decline is probably concentrated in the
unorganised sector, while the organised sector has experienced a
slowdown in growth,” he wrote. “Thus the weakest among the working class
are bearing the brunt of the employment decline.”
At the
labour naka in Delhi’s Subhash Nagar that morning, the sun rose higher
but no employer was in sight. The workers grew tired of the wait. “I
have not got any work for the past three days,” said Monu Raikwad, who
prepared to head back home empty handed for the fourth day in a row.