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Senior Economist Shamika Ravi Rebuts Recent CMIE Data Claiming Rising Unemployment In India

Swarajya StaffApr 30, 2019, 02:04 PM | Updated 02:04 PM IST
Member of Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, Shamika Ravi (Pic via Twitter)

Member of Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, Shamika Ravi (Pic via Twitter)


The recently released unemployment data by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) has been countered by Senior Economist and Member of Prime Minister’s Economic Advisory Council, Shamika Ravi, who said it is based on surveys which do not reveal their confidence intervals.

As per the data, unemployment rate in India averaged at 8.1 per cent in April, an upswing from 6.7 per cent in March and 7.2 per cent in February. The rate increased to 8.4 per cent in the third week of April if CMIE is to be believed.

This has been countered by Ravi who stated that the absence of confidence intervals in the data fails to reveal up to what level of confidence can one take the data seriously. She added that the month to month estimates by CMIE never discloses the standard errors.

The definition of an unemployed individual by CMIE which goes, ‘unemployed people of working age not actively looking for a job but are desirous of one’ was called a “relaxed definition” by Ravi who added that a normal definition of unemployment covers “people of working age actively looking and not finding jobs”.

This relaxed definition Ravi claims if taken into account would also increase the unemployment rate multiple times in some of India’s best performing states.

To gauge the true nature of the unemployment problem in India, Ravi suggested that people analyse publicly available data from FY16 and focus on the localised nature of India’s labour market.

She also refuted the assertion that a higher application rate for government jobs is synonymous with unemployment. Rather, she states that it portrays the interest of Indians in such jobs.

She though stressed that in the current market the quality of jobs remains a concern as opposed to the number of jobs which can be gauged by the higher rates of unemployment among graduates (30 per cent) as opposed to the semi-literate populace in the same age group who have a 6 per cent unemployment rate.

Over the yet to be released NSSO data she pointed out that a data of such a large scale takes years of due diligence to put out.

Ravi also acknowledged that India is currently unable to accurately study and measure in detail the amount of jobs being created in the informal sector.

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