Key Points

ILO Director Michiko Miyamoto warns India must adapt quickly to global work transformations, especially AI-driven changes. She highlights gender disparities in job losses and stresses social protection for informal workers. The e-Shram scheme is praised as a step toward formalizing India's workforce. Stronger industry-education links and domestic economic strategies are key to future-proofing jobs.

Key Points: ILO Director Miyamoto Urges India to Adapt to Changing Work Landscape

  • AI disproportionately impacts female employment in many countries
  • Social dialogue crucial for managing tech-driven job changes
  • Formalizing India's informal economy remains a complex challenge
  • Skills training must align with rapidly evolving industry needs
3 min read

India must adapt to rapidly changing work landscape, says International Labour Organisation Director

ILO's Michiko Miyamoto highlights AI risks, informal workforce challenges, and skills development as key priorities for India's evolving job market.

"The pace of change is so rapid; we have to have this continuous conversation all the time. – Michiko Miyamoto, ILO Director"

New Delhi, 22 July

India needs to closely examine global transformations in work arrangements as employment patterns continue to shift dramatically, according to Michiko Miyamoto, Director of the International Labour Organisation (ILO) DWT for South Asia and Country Office for India.

Speaking to ANI on the sidelines of the 3rd Global Industrial Relations Summit organised by FICCI-AIOE in collaboration with ILO and IOE Geneva, Miyamoto highlighted the critical need for adaptive strategies in India's evolving employment landscape.

Addressing concerns about artificial intelligence's impact on employment, Miyamoto acknowledged that AI is "definitely affecting our jobs and will continue to affect our jobs." However, she emphasised the importance of understanding which occupations and demographic groups face greater risks.

"We already know that female employment is more likely to be affected in many countries," Miyamoto observed, pointing to gender-specific vulnerabilities in the AI transition.

The ILO director stressed that protecting workers requires "a platform of conversation and agreed strategy between industry, workers, and supported by government." She identified social dialogue and industrial relations as key mechanisms for managing technological change.

"The pace of change is so rapid; we have to have this continuous conversation all the time. That's the only way to ensure that work is protected and people benefit more than are negatively affected," she explained.

With nearly 60% of the global workforce still engaged in the informal economy, Miyamoto highlighted the urgent need for formalisation and social protection extension. She acknowledged that transitioning from informal to formal economy represents a complex challenge that "everyone knows is not an easy path."

"Meanwhile, what can we do to protect people working in the informal economy? The main thing we can do immediately is provide social protection," she stated.

Praising India's social protection initiatives, Miyamoto specifically mentioned the e-Shram scheme as a positive step. "It's good to have a pathway for informal economy workforce to be registered so they are connected to existing social protection schemes. That is absolutely important," she noted.

The director emphasised that many workers remain unaware of available schemes, making awareness and connectivity crucial components of protection strategies.

Miyamoto identified skills development as fundamental to India's employment strategy, particularly given rapidly changing job requirements. She called for stronger connections between industry and education systems to ensure training programs deliver immediately employable skills.

"There's basic education - we need to continue and increase the quality of it. At the same time, job requirements are changing so quickly. The trick is connecting industry and education systems closer and closer, so training systems offer skills that are employable to industry straight away," she explained.

Discussing global economic uncertainties, including potential impacts from US trade policies under President Donald Trump, Miyamoto advocated for robust domestic economic strategies.

"We're living in a very uncertain world. We don't know how global policy will affect your economy today, tomorrow, next week," she observed. "In that environment, we need really good country strategy."

She praised India's focus on building strong domestic economic foundations, arguing that "if people in the economy are strong, then that's the most reliable source of a country's economy."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Shreya B
As a woman working in tech, I'm worried about the gender bias in AI impact mentioned here. Companies are already preferring male candidates for technical roles. We need policies to protect women's employment opportunities in this transition.
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Aman W
All talk no action! ILO keeps saying same things for years. Where are the concrete plans? Our education system is outdated - my engineering degree didn't teach any AI/ML skills. Now struggling to find good job 😔
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Priyanka N
Informal sector workers need more than just registration. My father is a street vendor - what good is e-Shram card when there's no pension, no healthcare? Government must deliver real benefits, not just paperwork.
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Karan T
Positive steps happening! PM Modi's Skill India mission is bridging gap between education & industry. Visited NSDC center last week - impressive tech training for rural youth. Change takes time friends, have patience 🙏
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David E
Working in India for 3 years now. The informal economy challenge is unique here. In US/Europe, we have stronger social security nets. India's scale makes this complex but e-Shram is good first step. More PPP models needed.
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Nisha Z
Why only focus on IT sector?

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