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General Studies 3 >> Agriculture

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AGRICULTURE AND EMPLOYMENT

AGRICULTURE AND EMPLOYMENT

1. Context

Two recent sets of data released by the National Sample Survey Office (NSSO) and the National Statistical Office (NSO) offer insights into the process of structural transformation in the Indian economy, especially in the agriculture and manufacturing sectors.

2. Key points

  • Economists refer to structural transformation as basically a compositional shift that entails the transfer of surplus labour from agriculture to sectors where productivity (output per worker) and average incomes are higher, particularly in manufacturing and modern services.
  • The NSSO's latest annual Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) report for 2021-22 (July-June) shows the farm sector's share in the country's employed labour force at 45.5 per cent.
  • That's down from 46.5 per cent in 2020-21, but still higher than 2018-19 low of 42.5 per cent.
  • The effects of the pandemic-induced economic disruptions, which had forced a reserve migration to the farms, haven't fully subsided.

3. Stalled transformation

  • Chart 1 shows the share of agriculture in the total workforce over a longer period, based on the previous year's PLFS reports (also called "Employment and Unemployment surveys until 2011-12). That share fell from 64.6 per cent in 1993-94 to 42.5 per cent in 2018-19.


  • The biggest decline from 58.5 per cent to 48. 9 per cent happened between 2004-05 and 2011-12.
  • During these seven years, the workforce engaged in farming registered for the first time in India's history, a fall even in absolute terms from 268.6 million to 231. 9 million.
  • The share of the labour force employed in manufacturing too peaked at 12. 6 per cent in 2011-12.
  • Since 2011-12, this structural transformation has slowed, with the share of agriculture in employment not falling fast enough and rising after 2018-19.
  • The share of manufacturing has dropped behind even that of construction and trade, hotels and restaurants.
  • In 2017-18, the latter two sectors accounted for 11. 7 per cent and 12 per cent of the total workforce respectively, as against manufacturing's 12.1 per cent. But in 2021-22, manufacturing's share, at 11.6 per cent was below that of construction (12. 4 per cent) as well as trade, hotels and restaurants (12. 1 per cent).
  • In other words, the structural transformation has not just slowed it has stalled if not reversed.
  • There is not much labour transfer taking place from farms to factories.
  • The jobs that are getting generated outside agriculture are mostly in construction and low-paid services, whose share has overtaken that of manufacturing.
  • The construction sector has now become the second-largest employer after agriculture.
  • Five years ago, it was at No.4, after agriculture, manufacturing and trade, hotels and restaurants.
  • Today, manufacturing has been relegated to the fourth spot.

4. Output vs. Value added

  • This links up with the second set of data, which are from the NSO's first revised estimates of national income for 2021-22.
  • It also contains estimates of "output" and "Value-added" by different sectors of the economy.
  • Output is simply the gross value of production by an industry or sector. For the economy, it would mean the total value of all goods and services produced during a financial year.
  • However, production involves the use of inputs.
  • Further, the inputs for one industry are the outputs of other industries supplying it.
  • To avoid double counting, one has to then, deduct the value of inputs or intermediate consumption from the value of output.
  • Since the producer merely adds value to the inputs that he uses, economists consider the gross value added (GVA) and not the gross value of output (GVO), as a measure of aggregate production.
  • One way to assess how much value an industry or sector creates in the process of production is by looking at the ratio of GVA to GVO.
  • GVA, to repeat, is GVO at current prices minus the value of intermediate consumption.
  • Chart 2 shows these ratios for various sectors in 2021-22, based on the NSO's latest revised estimate of national income.
 
  • It can be seen that value addition is the highest in agriculture.
  • For every ₹ 100 worth of produce coming from Indian farms, Rs 80 is the value generated by those owning and working the lands.
  • In 2021-22, the GVO from agriculture, forestry and fishing was estimated at ₹ 50.71 lakh crores.
  • After deducting the value of intermediate consumption (₹ 10.05 lakh crores), the GVA for the sector worked out to Rs 40.66 lakh crores.
  • On the other hand, value addition is the lowest, at just over a fifth, for manufacturing.
  • Although the GVO from manufacturing (₹ 156.90 lakh crores) was more than three times from agriculture, the value of intermediate consumption, too, was over 12 times (₹ 122.93 crores) higher.
  • As a result, the GVA by manufacturing, at Rs 33.97 lakh crores in 2021-22 was way below agriculture.
  • Purchased inputs are very little in agriculture, unlike manufacturing.
  • The value produced comes mostly from the land rather than the seeds, fertilisers, pesticides, diesel and electricity that farmers consume.

5. Link with employment

  • High value-addition is a key reason why agriculture can employ so many people.
  • The sector's share in GVO the total value of all goods and services produced by the country was only 11.4 per cent in 2021-22.
  • When measured in terms of value-added or GVA though, the share rose to 19 per cent.
  • It was the other way around for manufacturing: its share in overall GVO was as high as 35. 4 per cent while being just 15.8 per cent relative to GVA.
  • However, even taking into account high value-addition, a sector generating 19 per cent of income accruing to the primary factors of production, namely the owners of the land (farmers), labour (agricultural workers) and capital (lenders) cannot support 45 per cent of the country's population.
  • Moreover, the GVA -GVO ratio is not a measure of productivity.
  • An agriculturalist may be adding more value to every unit of input he consumes than a manufacturer.
  • But productivity is a function of output per worker or per unit of land which is low in agriculture compared to modern manufacturing and services.
  • It explains why the average farmer earns less than his urban counterpart.
  • To earn more, the farmer's productivity has to go up which means producing more on the same land with fewer hands.
  • At the end of the day. there is no escaping the fact that India has too many people in agriculture.
  • They need to be enabled to find employment in other sectors, which will, in turn, raise agriculture's productivity.

For Prelims & Mains 

For Prelims: Agriculture, Employment, Unemployment, NSO, GVA, GVO, NSSO
 
Previous year questions

Disguised unemployment generally means (2013)

(a) large number of people remain unemployed
(b) alternative employment is not available
(c) marginal productivity of labour is zero
(d) productivity of workers is low

Ans: (c)

For Mains: 

Previous year questions:

Can the strategy of regional-resource based manufacturing help in promoting employment in India? (2019)

Normally countries shift from agriculture to industry and then later to services, but India shifted directly from agriculture to services. What are the reasons for the huge growth of services vis-a-vis industry in the country? Can India become a developed country without a strong industrial base? (2014)

Practice question
1. What is India’s labour force? Discuss the reasons for jobs shifting from agriculture. (250 Words)
 
Source: The Indian Express

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