Job creation by the micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs) sector saw a growth of 13.9 percent in the past four years, an industry survey claims.
The findings oppose official and other industry data which show that there was massive job losses since the the note-bank and GST implementation in this very sector.
While private sector economic think-tank has found that as many as 13 million jobs were lost in 2018 alone, the official NSSO data show that unemployment rate touched a 46-year high in 2018.
As per a CII survey among over 1 lakh MSMEs, there has been a 13.9 percent increase net jobs additions (or 3,32,394 new jobs created), over the past four years, which is a 3.3 percent increase per annum in these four years.
The survey, that covered 1,05,347 MSMEs of varying sizes, across sectors, located in about 350 industrial centres spread across the country, indicates that micro enterprises were the largest job creators in the past four years and will continue to be so in the next three years.
They put the findings into context. The survey mapped the jobs figures against publicly available macro-level data sourced from the Labour Bureau (for total workforce).
It said that the total workforce size according to the Labour Bureau is estimated at 450 million, the overall job additions work out to 13.514.9 million per annum.
The top job generating sectors were hospitality & tourism followed by textiles & apparel and metal products, during the past four years. Machinery parts and transport and logistics were the next significant job creators, it showed.
In terms of states, Maharashtra, Gujarat and Telangana were the largest job creators, while in case of exporters, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu and Telangana topped.
The survey said they expect higher growth in employment in the next three years.
This optimism emanates from the fact that government initiatives like the 2 percent interest subvention given to all MSMEs and trade receivables e-discounting system (TReDS) would drive future growth leading to more employment, the report stated.