You are here: Home » Economy & Policy » News
The high road to net zero: How CCUS can speed up India's transition plan
icon-arrow-left
Business Standard

Fresh formal job creation below 1 million for third month: EPFO data

Surprisingly, the number of new male subscribers fell more (14.9 per cent) than female (12.9 per cent) in December

Topics
jobs | Employment | EPFO data

Shiva Rajora  |  New Delhi 



EPFO
The monthly data released by EPFO is part of the government’s effort to track formal-sector employment by using payrolls as an instrument

Fresh formal declined sequentially in December and remained below the 1 million mark for the third consecutive month, signaling pressure in the market, the latest payroll data released by the Employee Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) on Monday showed.

The number of new monthly subscribers under the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) declined by 14.5 per cent to 802,250 in December from 937,780 in November. In October, only 780,170 new subscribers had joined the EPF, which was the lowest monthly enrollment since May 2021.

In FY23, the number of monthly new subscribers had remained above 1 million for six consecutive months from April to September, touching a high of 1,159,350 in July.

Net payroll addition, which is calculated taking into account the number of new subscribers, the number of exits, and the return of old subscribers, however, increased by 7.7 per cent to 1,493,031 in December from 1,385,923 in November.

However, the net monthly payroll numbers are provisional in nature and often revised sharply the following month. That is why the new subscriber figure has greater certitude than net additions.

Of the new subscribers added in December, 446,358 are in the 18-25 age group, down by 15.5 per cent from 528,484 in November.

This is crucial because subscribers in the 18-25 age group are usually first-timers in the labour market, and this metric reflects its robustness.

Surprisingly, the number of new male subscribers fell more (14.9 per cent) than female (12.9 per cent) in December.

According to the data released by the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), which conducts its own surveys, India continued to fare poorly in in December, and the unemployment rate rose to 8.30 per cent in December from 8.03 per cent in November, due to a massive spike in urban joblessness. This was primarily due to an increase in labour force participation, but the economy could not generate enough .

“In December 2022, increased essentially in rural India and the unemployed increased predominantly in urban India. This is the highest unemployment rate recorded by urban India in non-Covid times in the past five years,” the CMIE said in a statement.

The monthly data released by EPFO is part of the government’s effort to track formal-sector by using payrolls as an instrument. Since April 2018, the National Statistical Office has been bringing out employment-related statistics in the formal sector, covering the period September 2017 onwards, using information on the number of subscribers under three major schemes, namely the Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme, Employees’ State Insurance Scheme (ESIC), and the National Pension System..

Month New subscribers Net Payroll
Apr-22 1059724 1229950
May 1047295 1115573
June 1146600 1299697
July 1162227 1391047
Aug 1056753 1256541
Sep 1006371 1291220
Oct 780170 977565
Nov 937780 1385923
Dec 802250 1493031

Source: EPFO

Subscribe to Business Standard Premium

Exclusive Stories, Curated Newsletters, 26 years of Archives, E-paper, and more!

Insightful news, sharp views, newsletters, e-paper, and more! Unlock incisive commentary only on Business Standard.

Download the Business Standard App for latest Business News and Market News .

First Published: Mon, February 20 2023. 18:51 IST

RECOMMENDED FOR YOU

.