Visible progress, invisible exclusion
Visible Progress, Invisible Exclusion
India's Jobless Growth Paradox — UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- The phrase captures India's macro-economic contradiction: high GDP growth + rising capex coexisting with stalled labour absorption — growth that registers in headline numbers but bypasses the vast workforce. [S1][S4]
- Budget 2026-27 crystallises this tension: ₹12.2 lakh crore in public capex yet a weakening mechanism linking capital formation to employment creation. [S1][S2]
- Central to GS-III (Indian Economy) and GS-II (Social Justice / Welfare), and a live editorial lens for Mains answer enrichment.
- The World Bank flags India must generate ~7.9 million non-farm jobs annually until 2030 — a target increasingly misaligned with the capital-intensity of current growth. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- Budget 2026-27 (presented February 1, 2026): Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman scaled public capex to ₹12.2 lakh crore and guided the fiscal deficit to 4.3% of GDP — framed as a structural "Viksit Bharat" doctrine, not pandemic-era stimulus. [S1][S2][S3]
- Op-ed by Deepanshu Mohan (O.P. Jindal Global University) and Ankur Singh (CNES), published The Hindu, February 3, 2026, gave the theme its title: "Visible progress, invisible exclusion." [S6]
- Real GDP growth estimated at 7.4% for FY 2025-26, nominal GDP growth at 8% — yet joblessness data undercuts celebratory narratives. [S1]
3. Background & Evolution
| Period | Milestone |
|---|---|
| 2014–19 | "Make in India" push; manufacturing targeted at 25% of GDP (unreached) |
| 2017 | Labour Code consolidation process begins — 44 codes → 4 Codes |
| 2020–21 | COVID shock; migrant crisis exposed structural informality of labour market |
| 2021–25 | Capex-led recovery doctrine adopted; annual capex scaling from ~₹5.5 lakh crore to ₹12.2 lakh crore [S2] |
| 2022 | National Employment Policy framework under discussion (yet to be finalised) |
| 2025 (Independence Day) | PM announces 350+ reform rollouts, including Labour Code notifications [S1] |
| 2026 | Budget 2026-27 cements borrowing-heavy, capex-centric growth doctrine [S2][S3] |
- Predecessor framework: Nehruvian capital-intensive industrialisation; post-1991 services-led growth both bypassed large-scale manufacturing employment.
- Proximate predecessor: "Viksit Bharat 2047" roadmap — framework under which current capex doctrine is positioned. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions & Concepts
- Jobless Growth: Economic expansion where GDP rises but employment (especially in formal/manufacturing sectors) does not grow proportionately.
- Labour Absorption Rate: Share of workforce absorbed into productive employment relative to workforce growth.
- Capex (Capital Expenditure): Government spending on infrastructure, assets, and physical capital — Budget 2026-27 allocates ₹12.2 lakh crore. [S2]
- Fiscal Deficit (BE 2026-27): 4.3% of GDP; debt-to-GDP ratio 55.6%. [S1][S2]
- LFPR (Labour Force Participation Rate): India ~50% — low by lower-middle-income country standards. [S4]
Key Numbers
| Metric | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Public Capex 2026-27 | ₹12.2 lakh crore | PIB [S2] |
| Fiscal Deficit 2026-27 | 4.3% of GDP | PIB [S1] |
| Total Expenditure 2026-27 | ₹53.5 lakh crore | PIB [S1] |
| Non-Debt Receipts 2026-27 | ₹36.5 lakh crore | PIB [S1] |
| Debt-to-GDP 2026-27 | 55.6% | PIB [S1] |
| Real GDP Growth FY26 | 7.4% | PIB [S1] |
| New Non-Farm Jobs Needed (annual until 2030) | ~7.9 million | World Bank [S4] |
| Manufacturing share of new project announcements (Q1 FY26) | 54% (10-quarter high) | Business Standard [S5] |
Implementing Ministry / Departments
- Ministry of Finance — Budget, fiscal policy, capex allocation
- Ministry of Labour & Employment — Labour Codes, ESIC, EPFO
- Ministry of MSME — MSME manufacturing push
- NITI Aayog — Viksit Bharat roadmap, employment projections
Enabling Legislation / Policy
- Four Labour Codes (consolidated from 44 Acts): Code on Wages (2019), Industrial Relations Code (2020), Code on Social Security (2020), Occupational Safety, Health & Working Conditions Code (2020) — notified but awaiting state rules for full operationalisation [S1]
- Article 41 (DPSP) — Right to work, education, public assistance
- Article 43 (DPSP) — Living wage and decent conditions of work
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Capex multiplier assumption: Government assumes that ₹12.2 lakh crore capex will crowd in private investment — but the transmission mechanism to labour markets is broken; capital-intensive infra (highways, ports, semiconductors) creates few direct jobs per rupee invested. [S2][S6]
- MSME paradox: MSMEs are acknowledged as labour-intensive and pushed in Budget 2026-27, yet credit gaps, GST compliance burden, and formalisation costs limit their scale-up. [S6]
- Semiconductor/Biopharma frontier: Strategically vital but inherently skill-intensive and low-employment-intensity sectors — cannot absorb India's semiskilled surplus. [S6]
- Fiscal math concern: Borrowing-heavy doctrine sustains capex without tax buoyancy adequate to fund social protection for those excluded from growth. [S3]
Social
- India's LFPR (~50%) is low, especially female LFPR which remains among the world's lowest for comparable economies. [S4]
- Migrant labour informality: 90%+ of India's workforce remains informal — structural capex does not automatically formalise this population.
- Skills paradox: NCAER (Dec 2025) notes disconnect between skilling outcomes (trained numbers) and actual job absorption — millions trained, few absorbed. [S4]
- Invisible exclusion: Women, SC/ST, migrant workers, and semi-skilled youth are excluded from the benefits of capital-heavy growth without targeted redistributive mechanisms.
Legal / Constitutional
- DPSPs (Articles 38–43): State obligation to minimise inequality, ensure adequate livelihood — unenforceable but Mains-relevant normative framework.
- Four Labour Codes remain only partially operationalised — states yet to frame rules; creates a regulatory vacuum for workers. [S1]
- Supreme Court in Maneka Gandhi v. Union of India broadened "life" under Article 21 to include livelihood — provides judicial anchor for employment rights discourse.
Ethical / Governance
- "Veneer of macro-economic stability": Growth metrics (GDP, capex) are chosen indicators — they are visible and politically rewarding; employment and wage data are harder to publicise and often excluded from budget speech emphasis. [S6]
- Data opacity: Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) methodology has faced criticism; NSSO restructuring post-2019 reduced frequency of robust labour data.
- Accountability gap: No statutory employment-outcome targets linked to capex expenditure — unlike expenditure accountability under FRBM.
Administrative
- Centre-State split: Labour is a Concurrent List subject (List III); Labour Codes require state-level rules — uneven implementation across states creates regulatory arbitrage.
- Bottleneck — land & labour: Manufacturing scale-up in India remains constrained by land acquisition delays and litigation, affecting the employment-capex link.
- EPFO/ESIC coverage: Social security net covers only ~15% of workforce — structural exclusion baked into implementation architecture.
Historical
- India's post-1991 growth was services-led, bypassing the manufacturing-employment ladder that East Asian economies (South Korea, Taiwan, China) climbed.
- Lewis Turning Point (structural surplus labour absorption into manufacturing) — India may miss this window if capital intensity of industry continues to rise.
- Comparative: China (1990s-2000s) absorbed 100+ million workers through labour-intensive manufacturing — India's current model diverges from this path.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- February 1, 2026: Budget 2026-27 presented; capex set at ₹12.2 lakh crore; fiscal deficit at 4.3% of GDP; MSME manufacturing highlighted. [S2][S3]
- February 3, 2026: Op-ed "Visible progress, invisible exclusion" (The Hindu) by Deepanshu Mohan & Ankur Singh flags labour absorption crisis. [S6]
- August 2025 (Independence Day): PM announces 350+ reforms, including Labour Code notifications in progress. [S1]
- December 2025: NCAER report (World Bank platform) — India's Employment Prospects: Pathways to Jobs — highlights skills-absorption paradox and need for 7.9 million non-farm jobs/year. [S4]
- Q1 FY 2025-26: Manufacturing projects = 54% of all new project announcements (10-quarter high at ₹2.3 trillion) — signals capital commitment but employment impact lagged. [S5]
- FY 2025-26: Real GDP growth estimated at 7.4%; nominal at 8% — headline strength masking labour market stress. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Public capex in Budget 2026-27 is fixed at ₹12.2 lakh crore. [S2]
- Fiscal deficit target for BE 2026-27 is 4.3% of GDP. [S1]
- India's debt-to-GDP ratio in BE 2026-27 is 55.6% (down from 56.1% in RE 2025-26). [S1]
- Total government expenditure in Budget 2026-27: ₹53.5 lakh crore; non-debt receipts: ₹36.5 lakh crore. [S1]
- India needs ~7.9 million new non-farm jobs annually until 2030 — World Bank/NCAER estimate. [S4]
- India's Labour Force Participation Rate is approximately 50% — low relative to comparable lower-middle-income economies. [S4]
- 44 central labour laws were consolidated into 4 Labour Codes — notified but state rules incomplete as of 2025. [S1]
- Labour is a Concurrent List subject (Schedule VII, List III) of the Constitution.
- Manufacturing share of new project announcements in Q1 FY26 stood at 54% — a 10-quarter high. [S5]
- The Code on Wages, 2019 is the first of the four Labour Codes to be enacted.
- Article 43 (DPSP): Directs the State to secure living wage and decent conditions of work for all workers.
- "Viksit Bharat" is the overarching framework under which Budget 2026-27's capex doctrine is framed — target year: 2047. [S3]
- NCAER's December 2025 report identifies agro-processing manufacturing as the highest-potential sector for absorbing less-educated workers. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping:
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Indian Economy — Growth, Development, Employment; Inclusive Growth; Government Budgeting |
| GS-II | Government Policies for vulnerable sections; Social Justice |
| GS-IV | Ethics in governance — Transparency, accountability in public expenditure |
Plausible Mains Question Stems:
- "India's capital expenditure-driven growth model, while improving infrastructure, has failed to generate commensurate employment. Critically examine the structural reasons for this disconnect and suggest policy corrections." (GS-III, 15M)
- "Budget 2026-27 signals a shift from pandemic-era management to a borrowing-heavy capex doctrine. Evaluate its implications for inclusive growth and labour welfare in India." (GS-III, 10M)
- "The Four Labour Codes promise to formalise India's workforce, yet remain unevenly implemented. Analyse the governance challenges and their consequences for worker protection." (GS-II, 15M)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) | Primary data source for India's employment/unemployment statistics; methodology debates directly relevant |
| Four Labour Codes (2019–2020) | Legislative backbone for formalisation; state implementation gap is the policy bottleneck |
| Viksit Bharat 2047 | Overarching vision under which Budget 2026-27 capex doctrine is framed |
| FRBM Act & Fiscal Consolidation | Borrowing-heavy doctrine raises FRBM compliance questions; deficit trajectory debate |
| MSME Sector in India | Labour-intensive manufacturing link; credit, GST, and formalisation challenges |
| Lewis Model of Structural Transformation | Theoretical framework explaining labour shift from agriculture to industry — India's stalled transition |
| PM Vishwakarma / Skill India / PMKVY | Skilling infrastructure — the supply side whose demand-absorption is failing |
| East Asian Development Model | Comparative lens — South Korea/China manufacturing-employment ladder India risks missing |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Capex ≠ Employment guarantee: Aspirants conflate high capex with high employment generation — the article explicitly argues capital-intensive sectors decouple these. Avoid this in Mains answers.
- Labour Codes — notified ≠ operational: All four Codes are enacted and notified at the Centre, but state rules are pending for most states — do not write "fully implemented."
- Fiscal deficit figure confusion: BE 2026-27 is 4.3% of GDP — do not confuse with the 4.5% target of 2025-26 or 3% FRBM medium-term goal.
- LFPR vs. Unemployment Rate: India's low LFPR (~50%) reflects discouraged workers dropping out of the labour force — this is different from (and often worse than) the headline unemployment rate.
- "Viksit Bharat" is a vision, not a scheme: It has no single implementing ministry or nodal scheme — confusing it with a specific programme will cost marks.
11. Sources
- [S1] PIB — "India's Real GDP Estimated to Grow by 7.4% in FY 2025-26" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2221389 — (Tier 1)
- [S2] PIB — "Highlights of Union Budget 2026-27" — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2221455 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] India Budget — "Budget Speech 2026-27, Nirmala Sitharaman" — https://www.indiabudget.gov.in/doc/budget_speech.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S4] World Bank / NCAER — "India's Employment Prospects: Pathways to Jobs, December 2025" — https://connect4impact.worldbank.org/system/files/2026-02/NCAER_Indias_Employment_Prospects_Pathways_to_Jobs_Dec25_0.pdf — (Tier 2)
- [S5] Business Standard — "Manufacturing Dominated New Projects in Q1, Share at 10-Quarter High" — https://www.business-standard.com/economy/news/manufacturing-dominated-new-projects-in-q1-share-at-10-quarter-high-125071400011_1.html — (Tier 4)
- [S6] The Hindu — "Visible progress, invisible exclusion" (Deepanshu Mohan & Ankur Singh), February 3, 2026, Page 9 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-02-03/th_international/articleGPJFHES7I-13353912.ece — (Tier 4 / Primary article)