What is keeping India‘s engineers unemployed
According
 to multiple estimates, India trains around 1.5 million engineers, which
 is more than the US and China combined. However, two key industries 
hiring these engineers information technology and manufacturing are 
actually hiring fewer people than before. 
For 
example, India's IT industry, a sponge for 50-75% of these engineers 
will hire 50,000 fewer people this year, according to Nasscom. 
Manufacturing, too, is facing a similar stasis, say HR consultants and 
skills evaluation firms. 
According to data 
AICTE, the regulator for technical education in India, there were 1,511 
engineering colleges across India, graduating over 550,000 students back
 in 2006-07. Fuelled by fast growth, especially in the $110 billion 
outsourcing market, a raft of new colleges sprung up since then, the 
number of colleges and graduates have doubled. 
Job problems...
Jobs
 have, however, failed to keep pace. "The entire ecosystem has been 
built around feeding the IT industry," says Kamal Karanth, managing 
director of Kelly Services, a global HR consultancy. 
"But,
 the business model of IT companies has changed...customers are asking 
for more. The crisis is very real today." Placement numbers across 
institutes including tier-I colleges such as IIT Bombay have mirrored 
these struggles. 
In 2012-13, in IIT Bombay, a 
total of 1,501 students opted to go through the placement process. At 
the time of writing, only 1,005 had been placed (placements are 
currently underway in the institute). 
In 
2011-12, 1,060 of the 1,389 students were placed. Further down the 
pecking order, at the Amity School of Engineering and Technology, 
placements are muted. The number of companies visiting is down 86 last 
year to 67 in 2013 at the time of writing (placements are currently 
underway). 
Batch sizes have reduced 
drastically at its Noida campus this year, with 365 students placed so 
far in a batch size of 459, compared to 1,032 being placed in a batch 
size of 1,160 last year. 
"Some companies have 
ed the joining dates of students who passed out last year and they are 
still waiting to be placed," says Ajay Rana, director, Amity Technical 
Placement Centre. "We can expect joining dates of students who passed 
out this year to be deferred by a minimum of six months." 
...Trickle down
This
 muddled equation is now showing signs of social and economic strain 
across the country. Frustrated engineers are taking jobs for which they 
are overqualified and, therefore, underpaid. 
A
 few exceptions have even turned to crime. According to media reports, 
Manjunath Reddy, a civil engineer, turned to chain snatching in Thane, a
 suburb of Mumbai, to support his young family. While he used some money
 to buy a small flat in peripheral Mumbai, his failure to net a job 
drove him to crime, he told the police when caught. 
Like
 him, another engineer in Aurangabad turned to car lifting as a route to
 easy money. "The social aspect of this massive under-employment and 
unemployment will soon be witnessed," warns Pratik Kumar, HR chief of 
Wipro and chief executive of its infrastructure engineering unit. 
Hiring
 is slowing down because recruiters are changing their strategy. "An 
engineering degree is a poor proxy for your education and employment 
skills," says Manish Sabharwal, chairman of TeamLease, a temp staffing 
firm. 
"The world of work is evolving... 
employers increasingly don't care what you know, they focus on what you 
can do with that knowledge." While dozens of new institutes have been 
established in the past six or eight years, he claims that over a third 
of them are empty and perhaps they are "worth more dead (for the real 
estate they sit on) than alive." 
A global 
economic slowdown may have only worsened what is already a bad problem, 
say others such as Amit Bansal, co-founder of Purple Leap, a skills 
assessment firm, which routinely gauges the capabilities of students 
across these institutes. 
"Even without this 
slowdown, there are a large number of students who won't get a job," he 
says. Bansal estimates that, at best, there are 150,000-200,000 jobs 
generated annually in the Indian economy and far too many engineers 
attacking this labour pool. 
What's more, 
India's technical talent pool is also warped, with almost the same 
number of engineers as technical graduates institutes such as ITI. "In 
developed markets, there is usually one engineer for every ten," says 
Bansal. This skew is only compounding the woes of engineers in India.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment