National Policy for Skill
Development
and Entrepreneurship: A Critique
Overview
Skill
is considered as an instrument to improve productivity and address the
imbalances
that exist in the labour market. Combined with knowledge, skill can
prove to be a driving force of economic growth and social development in
any country. According to a professional consultancy, Earnest and Young,
64 per cent of India’s population is expected to be in the age group of
16-29 years by the end of 2026.
Given that only 4.69 per cent of the total
Indian population has undergone formal skill training, according to the
National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) data of 2011-12, this gap between
demand and supply will continue to widen. To address this concern,
National Policy on Skill Development was first formulated in 2009 with
the aim of skilling 500 million people by 2022. After its formulation,
the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) was established in the
same year with an aim to facilitate private sector participation through
innovative funding models.
The National Skills Development Agency was
created in June 2013, which works with different state agencies to
enable and upscale different skilling efforts in the states. In 2015,
Prime Minister Narender Modi, launched Skill India Programme on World
Youth Skill Day, announcing the aim to skill around 402 million people
by 2022. This paved a way for formulation of the National Policy on
Skill Development and Entrepreneurship, 2015; which superseded the
policy of 2009.
National Policy on Skill Development and
Entrepreneurship
The primary aim of the policy is to scale
the skilling target with speed, vefficiency and sustainability. The
policy links skill development to employability with special focus on
promoting innovation through encouraging entrepreneurship, so as to
achieve inclusive growth in the country.
The Ministry of Skill Development and
Entrepreneurship (MSDE) formed in 2014, in its annual report of 2016-17
mentioned top 10 sectors that will require skilled and trained
professionals. On the top of the list are sectors like construction,
retail, beauty & wellness, textile-handloom etc.
Gaps in Policy Formulation and
Implementation
A major critique of the 2009 policy was that
the goal of skilling 500 million people was fixed without any basis and
this is the main issue with the 2015 policy as well. A report by the
Committee for Rationalisation and Optimisation of the functioning of the
Sector Skill Councils in 2017, stated that India’s goal of skilling 402
million people is way too large, unnecessary and unattainable. It argued
that like 2009, the 2015 target was set without any thoughtful
consideration. The committee said that Sector Skill Councils proposed
‘huge physical targets’ of training and certifying institutions and
people (both trainee and trainers) on an arbitrary basis without
formulating a sectoral labour market information and sector specific
skill development plans.
Reasons for the gaps in policy formulation
and implementation are as follows:
1. Absence of nation-wide vocational
education and training,
2. Inadequate industry interface,
3. Course curriculum of various skill
courses is unable to meet the desires and need of the demand side, which
makes a candidate incapable to compete in the market.
4. Inefficient finance available,
5. Shortage of qualified trainers and scarce
training capacity and
6. Lack of proper infrastructure at the
training centres.
A 2013 paper of the Institute of Applied
Manpower Research (IAMR) questioned the basis of government’s target of
skilling millions of people by 2020, without having a unified definition
of ‘skill’.
Experts say that for a country that adds 12 million people to its
workforce every year, less than 4 per cent of this population has
received any formal training. Hence, with the loopholes in the policy
and the way it has been implemented, the unemployment rate will only
increase.
Way Forward
-
The Ministry of Skill Development and
Entrepreneurship (MSDE) was established as the aggregator in the sector
to bring synergy between the different different government bodies
running skill development courses but often the duplication of roles and
responsibilities have persisted with other ministries such as Ministry
of Labour and Employment, Ministry of Human Resource and Development,
etc. The need of the hour is that all these ministries work in
coordination.
-
There is an urgency that the government
starts working towards the loopholes and recommendations highlighted by
the Committee for Rationalisation and Optimisation of the functioning of
the Sector Skill Councils in 2017 that was appointed by the government
to analyse the policy.
-
Most developed countries, have a
well-defined vocational education system of learning and training that
encourage job readiness amongst the youth and promotes entrepreneurship.
Such inspirational institutes need to be established in India that have
qualified trainers, proper infrastructure, match the needs of the
employment sector, encourage entrepreneurship and ensure that every
youth trained is linked to one or the other job opportunities.
-
There is a futuristic approach required to
ensure that the maximum overlap happens between jobseeker’s aspirations
and employer’s expectations. For this local demand needs to be mapped,
where in skill courses can be co-created as per the local industry’s
requirement. This will help to create a positive local ecosystem for
jobs and entrepreneurship both. It will also help in overcoming mobility
related limitations faced by potential jobseekers.
-
For those people who migrate for jobs,
proper counselling and guidance needs to be provided before they migrate
and this definitely should be followed by post placement assistance.
Without lack of proper post placement assistance, there might be some
fallouts due to the pressure faced in new geography away from home.
■
References:
-
Knowledge paper on skill
development in India, Earnest and Young
-
Global Talent Crunch, Country
Perspective: India, 2018, Korn Ferry
-
Status of Education and
Vocational Training in India, 2011-12, National Sample Survey Office,
Ministry of Statistics & Programme Implementation, Government of India
-
Report of the Committee for
Rationalisation & Optimisation of the Functioning of the Sector Skill
Councils, December 2016, Ministry of Skill Development and
Entrepreneurship, Government of India
-
Estimating India’s Skill Gap
on Realistic Basis, Economic and Political Weekly, March 2013
-
https://www.nationalskillsnetwork.in/why-minimum-wages-are-critical-to-boost-skill-development
-
https://www.newsclick.in/modis-failures-skill-development-disaster
Aakriti Uttam & Jyoti Sharma
auttam@devalt.org & jsharma@devalt.org
Back to Contents
|