3.11 million jobs added in 6 months, first EPFO payroll count shows

The payroll count is essentially the difference between the number of workers who joined and exited from the EPFO's fold and as such is the net addition to jobs

Somesh Jha & Indivjal Dhasmana  |  New Delhi 

jobs, employment, work
Photo: Shutterstock

The Union government’s first-ever estimate of based on (EPFO) subscription database showed that 3.11 million were added in the in six months, even as there was a fall of 22 per cent in incremental in February 2018, compared to January to a four-month low of 472,075 persons.

The provisional figures released by the for six months showed 3.11 million joined the workforce in the formal sector during September 2017-February 2018. On a pro-rata basis, this would mean that 6.22 million additional were created in 2017-18. However, this may be a generalisation as the pattern of every month was quite erratic from September to February. For instance, addition to slowed in three months out of the six months under review. The slowdown was steepest for February on a monthly basis.

Madan Sabnavis, chief economist with CARE Ratings, said, “Definitely some are being created. The last few months of a financial year are never really a recruiting time, if you are looking at the organised sector. Also, people may exit during the end of the financial year. That is why February figures might be throwing a lower number."

However, more hands were hired in February than September and October.

“It has now been decided to publish the age-band wise estimate of all new subscribers as declared by their This data can be helpful in policymaking, planning and research work as the planners may have an idea as to what is the estimate of in different age band,” the Ministry of Labour and said in a press statement.

The payroll estimates, released by the based on its enrolment, threw up some contrasting trend between September 2017 and February 2018. While there was a net addition of 8.4 per cent to non-farm sector payroll in January, there was a net reduction of around 14 per cent in on payroll in December 2017. In November, while there was a 64.3 per cent jump in on payroll, there was a 9.5 per cent decline witnessed in the previous month.’

A majority – over 57 per cent – of the new enrolments was in the age group of 18-25 years in February 2018. over 35 years of age constituted around 15 per cent of net addition to the payroll.

One significant trend observed from the payroll estimates is that there was a consistent dip in the payroll for belonging to the age group of less than 18 years and 18-21 years since November last year. The payroll addition of belonging to these age groups was the lowest in February in the last six months.

This is the first-ever month-wise estimates on released by a government agency in India. The manages social security funds of in the organised and the semi-organised sector and it has 60 million members with active contribution at present.

However, the payroll database by will cover firms, employing more than 20 workers, which are required to mandatorily make provident fund contributions, at present. In India, 99.35 per cent of the firms employ less than 20 workers, as per the Sixth Economic Census of 2013-14.

The government’s payroll estimates follows a study titled ‘Towards a Payroll Reporting in India’ conducted by State Bank of India (SBI) Chief Economic Advisor Soumya Kanti Ghosh and Indian Institute of Management (IIM) Bengaluru professor Pulak Ghosh in January. The study had estimated 7 million generation in 2017-18 and critics had argued for a similar access to EPFO, National Pension System (NPS), and (ESIC) database based on which the two researchers had arrived at its estimates. Ghosh and Ghosh had recommended the government to release a monthly

Instead of using on the pro-rata basis for the remaining months of 2017-18, if one combines Ghosh and Ghosh data with the one released by the on Wednesday, around 4.6 million were created during April-February 2017-18, Soumya Kanti Ghosh said.

“If we project the March number on pro-rata basis, the total FY18 payroll as per the records would be thus around 5.1 million,” he said. However, the task force on data, led by former NITI Aayog Vice-Chairman Arvind Panagariya, had pointed to a few “serious limitations” to gauging based on administrative data from EPFO, NPS, and ESIC. “An important limitation of these datasets as sources of estimates of is that new entries into these datasets do not necessarily represent new For example, only firms with 20 or more are required to contribute to for their This means that when a firm with 19 adds another worker to its payroll, it must begin contributing to the for all its employees,” the taskforce said. It, however, said that the data sources can be useful in getting a count of formal

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First Published: Thu, April 26 2018. 00:26 IST