India's Job Boom: How Self-Employment Became the Nation's Growth Engine

Self-employment has become India's fastest-growing job category according to new data. The sector expanded dramatically from 239 million to 358 million positions over six years. Women are leading this employment revolution, adding 103 million workers to the workforce. Services and MSME sectors have emerged as major drivers of this job creation boom.

Key Points: Self-Employment Drives India Job Growth HDFC Bank Report

  • Self-employment grew from 239M to 358M jobs in six years
  • Women drove employment surge with 103M new workers added
  • Services sector led non-farm job creation adding 41M positions
  • MSMEs account for nearly half of manufacturing and services employment
3 min read

Self-employment has emerged as strongest engine of India's job growth: HDFC Bank Report

HDFC Bank report reveals self-employment surged to 358 million jobs, outpacing salaried work as women drive India's employment boom with 103 million new workers.

"Self-employment has emerged as the strongest engine of India's job growth - HDFC Bank Report"

New Delhi, November 17

Self-employment has emerged as the strongest engine of India's job growth over the past six years, according to HDFC Bank's Employment Trends in India report.

The study showed that self-employment (farm + non-farm) surged from 239 million in FY18 to 358 million in FY24, marking what the report describes as a "healthy CAGR of 7.0 per cent"

This surge makes self-employment the fastest-growing category across India's labour market, outpacing the growth of salaried work and casual labour.

Salaried or regular wage jobs increased only marginally, from 105 million in FY18 to 119 million in FY24, growing at a more subdued "CAGR: 4.1 per cent", while casual labour stagnated, inching up from 114 million to 122 million at a "CAGR: 1.1 per cent" during the same period.

This rapid expansion in self-employment occurred alongside a broader rise in labour market participation.

The report highlighted that the Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) for the working-age population (15-59 years) increased from 53 per cent in FY18 to 64.3 per cent in FY24, and that "women's participation has increased and stands at 31.7 per cent as of FY24", while male LFPR stands at 58.2 per cent.

The report noted that, between FY18 and FY24, total employment increased by 155 million, and a notable share of this surge was driven by women.

The report stated, "the increase in employment of 155 mn people was driven by higher female workers," with female employment rising by 103 million, nearly double the addition of male workers at 52 million

This suggests that more women and youth have been entering the labour force, many of whom may be turning toward self-employment due to limited availability of wage-based jobs.

The report noted that, with the self-employed now accounting for well over half of India's total employed population, this expanding segment has become central to the country's employment landscape.

It adds, a significant backdrop to rising self-employment is India's shifting sectoral employment landscape. As of FY24, 614 million people were employed in India, with the non-farm sector accounting for 54 per cent and agriculture 46 per cent of total employment

But, despite the rise of non-farm opportunities, agriculture continued to add employment, primarily through female workers. In the farm sector, the increase was "driven by higher female employment (+74 million) while male employment increased marginally (+5 million)"

At the same time, non-farm job creation was led by services, construction, and manufacturing. Services alone added 41 million jobs between FY18 and FY24, construction added 20 million, and manufacturing added 15 million.

Within services, the largest contributors to employment were wholesale and retail trade, transport, education, hotels and restaurants, and communication-related activities. Wholesale and retail trade alone accounted for "nearly 40 per cent of total increase in trade and services employment" and over one-fifth of non-farm job creation

Manufacturing employment grew to 70 million, led by textiles, food and beverages, metals, furniture, and tobacco, with "Textile and apparel accounting for nearly one-third of the increase" in manufacturing jobs

MSMEs, too, emerged as a central pillar of job creation. They accounted for 48 per cent of manufacturing employment and 48 per cent of services employment as of FY24, with MSME trade and services employment rising by 17 million in just two years.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
While self-employment growth is good, we shouldn't celebrate too much. Many people are forced into self-employment because regular jobs aren't available. The quality of employment matters - does it provide stable income, social security?
A
Arjun K
The MSME sector is truly becoming the backbone of our economy. My small manufacturing unit employs 15 people and we're growing steadily. Government schemes like Mudra loans have been very helpful for entrepreneurs like us.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see that agriculture continues to add employment, especially women workers. This shows rural India's resilience. The growth in wholesale/retail trade employment also reflects our growing consumer economy.
V
Vikram M
The data shows we're becoming a nation of entrepreneurs! From food delivery partners to small shop owners - everyone is embracing self-employment. This is the real "Make in India" story unfolding. 🇮🇳
K
Kavya N
While the numbers look impressive, I hope the government focuses on improving social security for self-employed individuals. Health insurance, pension schemes are crucial for this growing segment. Otherwise, it's just survival, not prosperity.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50