000 02877nam a22002177a 4500
999 _c2132
_d2132
003 OSt
005 20190504113908.0
008 190504b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a978-93-86215-44-4
028 _bAllied Informatics, Jaipur
_c6147
_d30/04/2019
_q2019-20
040 _aBSDU
_bEnglish
_cBSDU
082 _a331.10954
_bJAG
100 _aJagannathan, Raghavan
245 _aThe Jobs Crisis In India
260 _aNew Delhi
_bPan Macmillan Publishing India Pvt. Ltd.
_c2018
300 _a384
500 _aIf you’ve read about self-driving cars, blockchain and the internet of things (IoT), registered for a massive open online course (MOOC), considered dealing in cryptocurrencies, or asked Alexa to play your favourite song, the chances are you are one of the select few Indians adjusting to the reality of a brave new world driven by technology and automation. But somewhere you will also acknowledge the growing disquiet in society, where there is job-deficient growth, rising farm distress, and youths from different communities agitating for job reservations in government or the public sector. Like elsewhere on the globe, in India, too, the worlds of those with skills to handle technology and those without are diverging. This book presents us with insights, explanations and possible solutions to the aggravating jobs crisis in India. Ragahavan Jagannathan comprehensively and skillfully explains the various micro and macro factors that impact the overall job scenario, including the rise of the ‘gig’ economy, the use of robots, new technologies and artificial intelligence (AI) that displace human labour on the shop floor and in the services sector, and the economic uncertainties that lie ahead. Archaic labour laws designed to protect employees from exploitative employers are not helping matters at a time when capital is cheaper than ever. The world of long-term and predictable jobs and careers is shrinking. The only people who will benefit in this scenario are those who are willing to constantly upskill, relearn and relocate to improve their job and income prospects. The world is getting older demographically, and older people always find the speed of change difficult to cope with; India, with its younger population, can do better, but government and business have not got their act together yet.
504 _aContents 1. The New Pessimism over Jobs 2. Making Sense of India's Jobs Data 3. Whodunnit? Who, or What, is Killing Jobs? 4. Automation: Job Polarizer or Job Killer? 5. Where the Jobs Are 6. Demography, Urbanization, and Jobs 7. A Matter of Skilling 8. No Job? Employ Yourself, Become an Entrepreneur 9. Jobs or Gigs? What Will the Future Be like? 10. Is Universal Basic Income the Answer? 11. Toolkit for Survival 12. Conclusion: Restating the Jobs Challenge
650 _aEconomics
942 _2ddc
_cBK