The Haircut Analysis That Could Have Cemented Modi's Jobs Theory
"India produced 17,000 new Chartered Accountants in the fiscal
year 2016-17; 5,000 of them may have started their own accounting
practice. If we assume each accounting practice hired 20 new people,
there were one lakh new accounting firm jobs created."
"India
produces 80,000 new doctors, dentists and healthcare graduates every
year. If we assume 60 percent of these started their own medical
practice and employed five new people each, then the medical profession
created 2,40,000 jobs."
"India produces 80,000 new lawyers every
year. If 60 percent of them started their own new legal practice and
each employed two or three people, the legal profession created two lakh
new jobs."
These are all formal sector job estimation exercises which are relatively easy to work out.
What about the informal sector? There are ways to estimate those too.
Modi@4: How to Counter Job Shortage 'Nonsense' the Bhakt Way
"There
were 7.6 lakh new commercial vehicles sold in India last year. If we
assume 25 percent of these were replacement vehicles and 75 percent new
vehicles, and each new vehicle employs two people, then the transport
sector created 11.4 lakh new informal jobs."
"25.4 lakh passenger
vehicles were sold last year. Let's now assume 20 percent are for
replacement of old vehicles and 80 percent new. If only 25 percent of
these new vehicles employed one driver, this alone created five lakh new
jobs for drivers."
If you thought this is an extract from a
conversation among freshly-minted MBAs in a university campus rehearsing
for their job interviews with consulting firms, you would have been
right, normally.
But we live in abnormal times. This is also the
Prime Minister of India's speech in Parliament to apparently showcase
his government's record of job creation for 1.2 billion Indians.
The
prime minister's evidence for a record number of jobs being created in
the economy is some inane and convoluted analysis of numbers of lawyers,
doctors, accountants, and cars produced in India every year to impute
the number of jobs created.Perhaps, the prime minister could have resorted to an even more basic premise to prove how jobs are in abundance in the nation. 'India Doesn't Have a Jobs Scarcity but a Job Bounty'
A
large number of people are born in India every year. Everyone,
regardless of whether one is a doctor or a lawyer or an accountant,
needs some basic services and goods. One such essential service is a
haircut. Economists often hold that haircuts are among the most
non-tradeable goods or services in any economy. That is, a haircut
cannot be exported or imported away and must be produced and serviced
locally in the country.
Let us assume a male child less than 10
years old will need a haircut once in two months, 10- to 30-year-old
males will need a haircut monthly, 30 to 50-year-olds will need a
haircut once in two months and others will need a haircut once a
quarter. Let us also assume that a barber can cut one person's hair in
15 minutes. Using India's demographic distribution and barber
productivity, it can be inferred that India needs nearly 1.5 lakh new
barbers every year.
If we, like the prime minister, assume these
barbers employ two new people, then the haircut industry alone generates
nearly five lakh new informal jobs every year.
If we, like the prime minister, assume these barbers employ two new
people, then the haircut industry alone generates nearly five lakh new
informal jobs every year.Such irrefutable haircut analysis can now be
extrapolated to the larger economy to estimate the total number of jobs
created and thus we can infer that India does not have a jobs scarcity
but a jobs bounty.
If you find this line of reasoning laughable, you will not be alone. Pledge to Create Jobs Helped Modi, Trump Win: Rahul at Princeton PM Modi Resorted to Bizzare Analytics Rather Than Scientific Data for Job Estimation
That
the prime minister of India, who was blessed with the extraordinarily
good fortune of an absolute majority in Parliament, low oil prices, and a
robust global economy, had to resort to inane, twisted and bizarre
analytics to explain the state of jobs for the nation's youth is in
itself a vindication of how dire the jobs situation in the country is.
This is not how the leader of a $3 trillion global economic powerhouse should answer questions on jobs produced in the economy.
Most
large economies adopt scientific survey methods, gather empirical and
payroll data to estimate job creation in an economy. The Modi government
inexplicably abandoned the Labour Ministry's quarterly employment
surveys that were instituted in 2009. These surveys were an important
tool to estimate the state of jobs produced in the economy and surveyed
sectors accounting for more than 80 percent of all employment in the
country.
At the same time, the Modi government must be lauded for
publishing payroll data from the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation
and making forays into formal sector job estimations.
But in its
enthusiasm to embrace any small semblance of positive news on job
creation, the government released payroll data only from September 2017
and touted itself as an exemplary job creator, as the prime minister did
during his speech in Parliament.The EPFO data released publicly is
inadequate to make any inferences regarding new job creation. The time
period is too short, the data is too noisy and must be first normalised
for external shocks of demonetisation and the Goods and Services Tax.
It
does not need a scientist to infer that lack of jobs for India's youth
is one of the biggest issues confronting the nation today. It is
repeatedly borne out in various surveys. Jobs for hundreds of millions
of India's youth is a serious challenge. The answer to this challenge
lies in acknowledging it first and being open-minded to discuss new
policy solutions. Indulging in juvenile analytics to fool everyone into
believing that there is no jobs problem cannot be the solution.
90,000 Jobs, 3 Cr Candidates: Meet the Overqualified Job Aspirants
(Praveen
Chakravarty is Chairperson, Data Analytics Department of the Indian
National Congress, and a former scholar in a think tank.)
(This is an opinion piece and was originally published on BloombergQuint. The views expressed are the author's own. The Quint neither endorses nor is responsible for them.
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