CLASS NOTES
enough jobs in secondary and tertiary sectors. (A study of same trends will being out that
despite development, not enough job, have been created. The trend in the production &
employment has been
Trends in last 30 years
Production Employment
Industries 8 Times 2.5 times
Tertiary 11 times > 3 times
Agricultures 1/4
th
60%
SEF 3/4
th
40%
(3) We find that there in a lot of under employment in our country. Under – employment means
that a person in willing to work 8 hrs in a day but gets an employment for only 1 – 2 hours or is
then 8 hrs. Disguised unemployment is very common in the agriculture sector. For example: - if
5 people, are working on a piece of land, 3 are moved out, yet output remain the same. This
means that these 3 people were suffering from disguised unemployment in urban Indian also,
and other sectors there are many such people like painters, plumbers, repair person they may
spend the whole day but earn very little.
Why the primary sector in India continues to be the largest employer in 1973 as well as in
2000?
There was change in the share of GDP of the three sectors but the primary sector continues to be
the largest employer in 1973 as well as in 2000 because enough jobs were not created in the
secondary and tertiary sectors. Industrial output or production of goods increased by eight time i.e.,
from 6000 crore to 50,000 crore approximately but the employment increased 2.5 times only,
similarly in tertiary sector, the production increased 11 times i.e., from 10,000 crore to 110,000 crore
but employment increased only less than three times. Thus, the primary sector still employed about
63% people in the country as shown in the graphs given above.
From above, it is clear that there has been a change in the share of three sectors in GDP. The
share of the tertiary sector has increased and of primary sector decreased. The share of the
secondary sector remained constant.
But a similar change has not taken place in employment. The tertiary sector and secondary
sector still lags behind the primary sector which continues to employ almost 62% workers in the
year 2000. Thus, secondary and tertiary sectors produce 75% of the produce but employ less than
half the people. Comparatively, it can be stated that the share of the tertiary sector in GDP has
increased but it employs less percentage of people.
DISGUISED UNEMPLOYMENT
Disguised unemployment is a situation in which more people are engaged in an activity than the
required ones. The people who are actually engaged in such an activity appear to be employed but
are not fully employed. In such cases, even if the surplus labourers are removed from the work,
production does not suffer. In India, the problem of disguised unemployment is particularly acute in
rural areas where more persons do the work in the fields. Thus, more people do the same work than
is necessary. In other words, workers in agricultural sector are under-employed. In such situation,
everyone does work. No one remain idle but in actual fact, their labour effort gets divided. They
work less than their potential.