RETHINKING INDIA’S SKILLING OUTCOMES
RETHINKING INDIA’S SKILLING OUTCOMES
Despite massive government investment and large numbers trained, skilling has not become a first-choice pathway for Indian youth, nor has it translated into strong employability or wage gains.
India’s flagship programme, Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana, trained ~1.40 crore candidates (2015–2025), yet:
- Skilling lacks aspiration value
- Industry does not trust public certifications
- Most workers remain in informal jobs with limited returns to skills
Why skilling fails to inspire aspiration among youth
- Low penetration of formal vocational training
- Only ~4.1% of India’s workforce has formal vocational training
- (Data: Periodic Labour Force Survey, World Bank)
- This is only a marginal rise from ~2% a decade ago
Global comparison
- OECD average: ~44% of upper secondary students in vocational education
- Countries like Austria, Netherlands, Finland: ~70%
Disconnect between education and skilling
- India’s Gross Enrolment Ratio (GER) in higher education is 28%
- National Education Policy 2020 targets 50% GER by 2035
This target cannot be met by expanding degrees alone
Key insights:
- Skilling must be embedded within formal education, not treated as a parallel welfare programme.
- India Skills Report 2025 shows post degree skilling is not common
- Unlike global best practices, skilling does not “travel with” education in India
The structural failure of Sector Skill Councils (SSCs)
SSCs were meant to:
- Define industry standards
- Ensure relevance
- Certify employability
- Act as industry-facing institutions
But lagging:
- Extreme fragmentation
- Training: one agency
- Placement: optional / unclear
- No single institution owns employment outcomes
SSC certifications lacks credibility
SSC certificates have low signaling value since employers prefer:
- Degrees
- Work experience
Certification is often: Binary (pass/fail) or Not competency-graded
Contrast with industry-led certifications
Key reforms suggested
- Embed skills in degrees: Improve mobility between education and work
- Deepen industry ownership: Industry must Co-design curricula, Influence assessment standard
- Make SSCs answerable for: Placement outcomes and Employability metrics
- Push skilling into the workplace, not just classrooms
Skilling is not just about employment
It affects:
- Dignity of labour
- Productivity
- Demographic dividend
- Long-term economic growth
Without credible skilling, India risks converting its demographic advantage into a demographic burden.
