Dubai Telegraph - Educated and unemployed: India's angry young voters

EUR -
AED 3.859659
AFN 71.497817
ALL 98.328235
AMD 419.898548
ANG 1.895117
AOA 960.981091
ARS 1063.731053
AUD 1.622765
AWG 1.891482
AZN 1.788374
BAM 1.954374
BBD 2.106742
BDT 125.658288
BGN 1.95286
BHD 0.396115
BIF 3106.732552
BMD 1.050823
BND 1.413968
BOB 7.265628
BRL 6.382386
BSD 1.051523
BTN 89.03202
BWP 14.34553
BYN 3.43839
BYR 20596.13192
BZD 2.108241
CAD 1.476412
CDF 3015.861968
CHF 0.930262
CLF 0.037172
CLP 1025.665752
CNY 7.655458
CNH 7.674145
COP 4679.209991
CRC 533.505544
CUC 1.050823
CUP 27.846811
CVE 110.187725
CZK 25.187141
DJF 187.243341
DKK 7.45809
DOP 63.653542
DZD 140.592389
EGP 52.283157
ERN 15.762346
ETB 131.332098
FJD 2.385579
FKP 0.829433
GBP 0.830413
GEL 2.989606
GGP 0.829433
GHS 15.930222
GIP 0.829433
GMD 74.608307
GNF 9063.385092
GTQ 8.119074
GYD 219.889514
HKD 8.179066
HNL 26.625821
HRK 7.495793
HTG 137.849391
HUF 414.525482
IDR 16769.349593
ILS 3.807526
IMP 0.829433
INR 89.027464
IQD 1377.494636
IRR 44239.650802
ISK 145.686045
JEP 0.829433
JMD 164.87359
JOD 0.745138
JPY 156.629406
KES 136.080681
KGS 91.207285
KHR 4239.905506
KMF 493.30878
KPW 945.740353
KRW 1512.990766
KWD 0.322921
KYD 0.87626
KZT 550.108504
LAK 23074.939175
LBP 94161.580129
LKR 305.529917
LRD 188.222626
LSL 19.008308
LTL 3.102807
LVL 0.635632
LYD 5.131523
MAD 10.50853
MDL 19.242956
MGA 4941.346536
MKD 61.407719
MMK 3413.032299
MNT 3570.696692
MOP 8.430447
MRU 41.648999
MUR 49.125736
MVR 16.235294
MWK 1823.369215
MXN 21.386769
MYR 4.696718
MZN 67.141052
NAD 19.008127
NGN 1739.889673
NIO 38.692129
NOK 11.631193
NPR 142.451032
NZD 1.786862
OMR 0.404579
PAB 1.051523
PEN 3.938463
PGK 4.244942
PHP 61.561406
PKR 292.164144
PLN 4.294372
PYG 8193.020327
QAR 3.834048
RON 4.977115
RSD 116.945977
RUB 112.309414
RWF 1451.040958
SAR 3.947995
SBD 8.758227
SCR 14.323178
SDG 632.06918
SEK 11.57634
SGD 1.414497
SHP 0.829433
SLE 23.952485
SLL 22035.239074
SOS 600.961389
SRD 37.179694
STD 21749.91568
SVC 9.200766
SYP 2640.224307
SZL 19.014123
THB 36.175585
TJS 11.461326
TMT 3.688389
TND 3.313682
TOP 2.46113
TRY 36.512632
TTD 7.115739
TWD 34.283628
TZS 2768.919
UAH 43.904909
UGX 3869.13929
USD 1.050823
UYU 45.398162
UZS 13486.54188
VES 50.090007
VND 26696.159767
VUV 124.755825
WST 2.933468
XAF 655.478599
XAG 0.034135
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.839902
XDR 0.799816
XOF 655.478599
XPF 119.331742
YER 263.127139
ZAR 19.058105
ZMK 9458.660207
ZMW 28.416989
ZWL 338.364596
  • RIO

    0.5700

    63.84

    +0.89%

  • SCS

    -0.1200

    13.6

    -0.88%

  • BCC

    -1.0300

    146.49

    -0.7%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    24.56

    -0.04%

  • BCE

    0.0900

    27.13

    +0.33%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    24.31

    -0.33%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.51

    +0.07%

  • NGG

    -0.2400

    63.14

    -0.38%

  • RBGPF

    -1.6900

    60.31

    -2.8%

  • GSK

    0.6990

    35.009

    +2%

  • BP

    0.5050

    29.495

    +1.71%

  • RELX

    0.2100

    47.54

    +0.44%

  • BTI

    -0.4090

    37.321

    -1.1%

  • RYCEF

    0.2000

    7.44

    +2.69%

  • AZN

    1.2500

    68.29

    +1.83%

  • VOD

    0.0050

    8.875

    +0.06%

Educated and unemployed: India's angry young voters
Educated and unemployed: India's angry young voters / Photo: Naeem ANSARI - AFP

Educated and unemployed: India's angry young voters

At a run-down job centre in the suburbs of India's financial capital Mumbai, 27-year-old Mahesh Bhopale dreams of a well-paid government post -- just like millions of other young, unemployed graduates.

Text size:

As the world's most populous nation readies for general elections that begin April 19, politicians face a sobering reality. India is the fastest-growing major economy, but there are still not enough white-collar jobs for its educated youth.

"Our only way out of this life is to get a government job and get good benefits," said biology graduate Bhopale. "That will help us get married and start a family."

He has eked out a living in part-time jobs ranging from a tailor's assistant to a nighttime security guard while cramming for gruelling civil service examinations.

Coming from a farming village to the big city seeking work, Bhopale said he lacked the contacts to push his application in the private sector.

"A government job is the best kind of job," he said. "Educated people from villages like us can't get high-paying private sector jobs."

He isn't alone. The International Labour Organization estimates 29 percent of India's young university graduates were unemployed in 2022.

That rate is nearly nine times higher than for those without a diploma, who typically find work in low-paid service or construction jobs.

- 'Demographically expanding' -

Over half of India's 1.4 billion people are aged under 30, according to government health figures.

"Jobs are not rising as fast as the potential workforce is demographically expanding," said development economist R. Ramakumar, from Mumbai's Tata Institute of Social Sciences, noting many of the new jobs being created are in farming.

"That is one reason why you see a large number of applicants for a small number of positions in government jobs," Ramakumar said.

It also explains the "urge of people to go out of India through illegal channels", seeking jobs in the United States or Canada, he added.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is widely expected to win a third term in the upcoming elections, points to his success in convincing global tech giants like Apple and Dell to set up in India.

But critics say this has not translated into the millions of manufacturing jobs that people demand.

The World Bank warned this month that India -- like other South Asian nations -- was "not creating enough jobs to keep pace with its rapidly increasing working-age population".

South Asia is failing "to fully capitalise on its demographic dividend", said Franziska Ohnsorge, the bank's regional chief economist, calling it a "missed opportunity".

Many young Indians say they have no choice but to join the frenetic race for government jobs, prized for their decent pay, benefits and security.

Competition is intense.

State-run Indian Railways, for instance, receives millions of applications for hundreds of thousands of mid or low-level jobs.

Ganesh Gore, 34, said he had tried and failed the civil service exam five times.

"No party or politician helps us out," said Gore. "They are sitting there to eat money."

In 2022, after the government switched some permanent military jobs to temporary contracts, violent protests erupted, with people setting railway trains on fire.

Riskier jobs also find many takers.

Earlier this year, thousands queued to submit applications for jobs in Israel after labour shortages sparked by the war against Palestinian militants in Gaza.

- 'Millionaires and billionaires' -

India overtook Britain in 2022 to become the world's fifth-largest economy, and grew at a robust 8.4 percent in the October-December quarter, helped by a surging manufacturing sector.

But many young people say they are frustrated by a lack of opportunities.

In December 2023, protestors hurled smoke canisters into parliament while shouting anti-government slogans to highlight unemployment.

Saraswati Devi, whose daughter Neelam was arrested after the protest, said she was distraught over her inability to find a job.

"She is highly qualified, but wasn't getting a job.... she often used to say that 'I should just die as despite studying so much, I am unable to earn two meals,'" Saraswati told local media.

But it remains unclear if anger at unemployment will translate to voters turning from Modi's ruling party.

A March survey of students in the capital Delhi found only 30 percent blamed Modi's government for high unemployment rates, according to the Delhi-based Lokniti-CSDS research centre.

But some like Gore, smarting from his latest exam failure, see politicians as the tools of the mega-rich.

He believes they are profiting from national growth without supporting the wider country.

"The country is run by the handful of millionaires and billionaires," said Gore. "So politicians don't have much sway."

Y.Sharma--DT