India's Unemployment Rate Spikes To 8.11%, Four-Month High In April
India's unemployment rate spiked to a four-month high to 8.11 per cent in April from 7.8% in March. More jobs were created in rural areas than in urban areas.

The Centre for Monitoring India Economy (CMIE) latest research data released shows that more people joined the workforce compared to available jobs in Asia's third largest and most populated economy.
The nationwide unemployement rate rose to 8.11% in April, the highest since December. Urban joblessness rate increased to 9.81% from 8.51% in the same period while in the rural areas, it fell marginally to 7.34% in April from 7.47% a month ago, as per the data from research firm Centre for Monitoring India Economy.
CMIE data showed that around 94.6% of the people who joined the rural labor force became employed, while only 54.8% of seekers in urban areas found new jobs. CMIE's finding corroborates with the fact that demand for government's job guarantee program is falling in rural areas.
In its April bulletin, the Reserve Bank of India said demand for work under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act has been moderating since January on the back of better winter crop sowing and a recovery in informal sector employment.
Creating enough jobs for India's burgeoning population still remains a key challenge for Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government, especially as he looks to a third term in office in national elections due next summer.
About 87% of this expanded labor force were able to secure employment as an additional 22.1 million jobs were created in the month. The employment rate rose to 38.57% in April, highest since March 2020.
"The unemployment rate increased owing to a rise in the labor participation rate," Mahesh Vyas, head of CMIE, wrote in a column for the Business Standard newspaper.
India's labor force increased by 25.5 million people to 467.6 million in April, possibly due to "increase in optimism about finding employment," taking the labour participation rate to 41.98% in April, the highest in three years, he added.
"The notable rise in LPR and employment rate in India in the month of April reflects an increase in willingness among people to seek employment," Vyas said.
Rising labor force participation is the last leg of economic normalization since the pandemic, according to Gaurav Kapur, Chief Economist of IndusInd Bank. "It is a sign that normalization is happening, or has already gone through," he added.


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