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India’s demographic dividend strait-jacketed by labour regulations

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One of India’s most promising economic features is its large working-age population. Yet if India doesn’t find jobs for its young people, this boon will quickly turn into a powder-keg, as evinced by the recent agitations of unemployed Jats in Haryana.

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The most important impediment to job growth in India is the country’s outmoded labour regulations. These have been on the agenda since at least the mid-1990s, yet perpetually excused from reform. The arguments in favour of change bear repeating, lest India fails to grab a once-in-a-lifetime chance to capture its demographic dividend.

In 2015, less than 13 per cent of the population was over 55 years of age. 40.6 per cent of the population was in the prime working-age category of 25–54 years old. And 28.5 per cent of the population was 14 years and under, indicating that there is still plenty of labour in the pipeline.

India may well fail to capitalise on this favourable demography, given its current pace of job creation. While the economy is growing rapidly, growth is thanks largely to the high-end services sector, which receives the lion’s share of India’s foreign direct investment (FDI). Manufacturing and agriculture are sluggish. According to the Index of Industrial Production, manufacturing growth for 2014–15 was only 2.3 per cent, and on average manufacturing companies registered declines in sales and net profits before interest, depreciation and taxes. Agriculture grew by only 1.1 per cent in 2014–15, according to the Indian Economic Survey.

Yet India cannot rely on the services sector for job growth. Employment in this sector either requires a degree of education that the vast majority of Indians does not have and cannot be provided, or involves a low-quality retailing job, typically as a street vendor. The good service-sector jobs are capital intensive, a prohibitively expensive way to create jobs for a lower middle-income country like India. Only low- and mid-level manufacturing can provide the million jobs a month that India needs to absorb its growing, low-skilled workforce.

Why is manufacturing growth so woeful? Many analysts cite the regulatory environment as a powerful drag on the manufacturing sector. Among the issues in this area, India has more than 40 pieces of legislation governing labour at the federal level, and typically another 40 or so at the level of each state. These laws and regulations contain inconsistent definitions of basic items like ‘wage’, ‘factory’ and ‘week’.

Indian labour regulation is a nightmare to negotiate and leaves businesses open to exploitation by corrupt officials through the so-called inspector-raj. These pieces of legislation could easily be amalgamated into around five bills with consistent definitions, reducing the incidental costs of hiring labour, as has been argued in detail since at least the early 2000s.

Other areas that need reform include mandatory labour contract clauses that decouple wages from productivity, such as compulsory bonus payments, excessively detailed clauses relating to the organisation and processes of firms that cannot change with technology and best practice, and the Industrial Disputes Act (IDA), requires firms with more than 100 employees to request government permission to fire even a single employee, inevitably discouraging them from hiring workers in the first place.

One view suggests that these laws are not responsible for sluggish manufacturing growth because industrialists can get around them. State courts and governments are increasingly turning a blind eye to the employment of contract labour in non-contract jobs.

But this view is clearly refuted by the data. There is extensive clustering of firms by employment at a scale where the numbers of employees are affected by legislative kick-in, suggesting that legislation has a real disincentive effect. Empirical studies also find greater manufacturing growth in states with more liberal labour laws.

If firms are content to employ contract labour but only contract labour then legislated wages and conditions for regular workers must exceed market clearing levels and create unemployment. Privileged jobs for the mere 20 per cent of the Indian workforce who are employed in the formal sector should not come at the expense of joblessness or insecure work for the majority of labourers.

More importantly, while domestic firms might have the connections necessary to work-around labour regulations, foreign firms do not. Yet India is in dire need of foreign capital to provide the competitive manufacturing growth it now needs. This investment will not happen until regulations are improved because offshoring foreign firms, which employ many thousands of workers, not a mere 100, won’t bear the costs of negotiating India’s tricky regulatory environment when there are other options out there like Bangladesh or Vietnam.

The lack of manufacturing growth is also said to be simply a function of depressed global demand. Yet Bangladesh, in textiles, and Vietnam, in footwear and electronics, have both enjoyed solid export growth in the period since the global financial crisis slowed world trade growth. India is wage and skills competitive with these countries but does not provide as welcoming a business environment, so firms leaving China as its wages rise pass India by.

The central government can do little in the short term to amend labour regulations because the Congress Party blocks it in the upper house. In the meantime, the government has shown a willingness to allow states, as in Rajasthan, to proceed with changes and has committed to developing infrastructure so that when changes do come, labour regulation reform is effective. It has also made some small progress on ameliorating factors that affect the ease of doing business, and introduced an important new bankruptcy law.

But it must also start preparing the electorate to be responsive to legislative reforms of labour regulations down the road. The government’s failure on land acquisition reform shows the pitfalls of not building momentum for change, even when there is longstanding agreement that reform is desirable. That will require government effort to build a coalition in parliament for these changes, rather than contenting itself with teasing opposition leader Rahul Gandhi.

Mark Fabian is a doctoral candidate in economics at the Crawford School for Public Policy, The Australian National University.

3 responses to “India’s demographic dividend strait-jacketed by labour regulations”

  1. ” Yet Bangladesh, in textiles, and Vietnam, in footwear and electronics, have both enjoyed solid export growth in the period since the global financial crisis slowed world trade growth.”

    Those countries have horrible working and labour conditions with little or no government regulation in those industries so just because they enjoyed solid export growth, it doesn’t mean that the ordinary person is prospering from it.

    India needs to put more money in education in the poor areas of the country and invest more in the manufacturing sector.

    It seems that the corporations always manage to get around the labor laws and the government at the national and provincial level turn a blind eye to enforcing them.

  2. Mr Fabian may wish to consider the comments on India’s ‘demographic dividend’ made by Ranjit Goswami in his post of 5 April 2013:

    “Much of India’s population increase has occurred among the poorest socio-economic percentile. Relatively socio-economically advanced Indian states had a fertility rate of less than 2.1 in 2009 — less than the level needed to maintain a stable population following infant mortality standards in developed nations. But in poorer states like Bihar, fertility rates were nearer to 4.0.

    Does this growth mean India can rely on the ‘demographic dividend’ to spur development? This phenomenon, which refers to the period in which a large proportion of a country’s population is of working age, is said to have accounted for between one-fourth and two-fifths of East Asia’s ‘economic miracle’ as observed late last century.

    But India is not East Asia. Its population density is almost three times the average in East Asia and more than eight times the world average of 45 people per square kilometre. If India has anywhere near 1.69 billion people in 2050, it will have more than 500 people per square kilometre. Besides, in terms of infrastructure development India currently is nowhere near where East Asian nations were before their boom. In terms of soft to hard infrastructure, spanning education, healthcare, roads, electricity, housing, employment growth and more, India is visibly strained.”

    In his post, which attracted no fewer than 45 comments from readers, Goswami, of the Institute of Management Technology in Nagpur, recommended a one-child policy for India. In other words, he argued in favour of having ‘less labour in the pipe-line’.

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