• ECCE
  • School Edu
  • Higher Edu
  • Edu Tech
  • Skills
  • Jobs
  • Advertise
  • Login
[t4b-ticker]
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk
No Result
View All Result
Education21
Home Spotlight

SWI 2026 flags graduate employability crisis as a long-term structural trend

This research not only deepens an understanding of the drivers behind this crisis but also highlights the urgent and emerging challenges in harnessing India’s demographic dividend says Autar Nehru

education by education
April 7, 2026
in Spotlight
0
SWI 2026 flags graduate employability crisis as a long-term structural trend
0
SHARES
91
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The State of Working India (SWI) 2026 report identifies graduate employability and youth unemployment as a deepening structural crisis, based on a four-decade analysis of the official labour market data.

At the heart of the problem lies the massification of higher education. Rapid expansion of higher education institutions (HEIs)—driven by post-liberalization private sector growth and reinforced by the 11th Five-Year Plan—has not been matched by proportional increases in public funding or job creation. The result is a widening gap between degrees and decent work, even as India seeks to position itself as a key supplier to the global workforce.

Against this backdrop, the fifth edition of SWI, released by Azim Premji University’s Centre for Sustainable Employment in March, examines ‘Youth in the Labour Market: Pathways from Learning to Earning’. Drawing on government datasets, administrative records, and surveys spanning 1983–2023, the report situates today’s employment crisis within long-term economic and educational transformations.

With a median age of 28 and nearly 367 million people in the 15–29 age group, India’s demographic advantage is undeniable. Yet the transition from education to employment remains fraught. Graduate unemployment as per this report among youth hovers near 40%, raising serious questions about the direction and effectiveness of higher education and identifies the education-to-employment transition as a critical bottleneck. For many young Indians, securing a job takes a year or more, often involving prolonged spells of open unemployment. While such friction is common globally, its scale and persistence in India point to deeper structural constraints—particularly weak labour demand.

SWI 2026 shows that the school-to-work transition is both delayed and uncertain. Nearly 40% of individuals aged 15–25 and about 20% of those aged 25–29 are unemployed, while only a small fraction secure stable salaried jobs soon after graduation.

This is occurring alongside an unprecedented expansion in higher education. The number of HEIs has grown from 1,644 to over 69,000, with the sharpest rise between 2000 and 2010. College density has improved, and nearly 80% of institutions are now privately managed. Technical education has followed a similar trajectory, with a surge in privately run ITIs.

However, job creation has not kept pace. Between 2004–05 and 2023, around 5 million graduates entered the labour market annually, but only 2.8 million found employment—and just 1.7 million secured salaried positions. This mismatch has led to a persistent surplus of graduates and stagnating earnings.

The report notes that the 11th Five-Year Plan (2007-2012)—once described as an “Education Plan” by the then Prime Minster Dr Manmohan Singh—spurred expansion in institutions and enrolment. But fiscal constraints later slowed public investment, while deregulation enabled rapid private growth. This led to regional clustering, the proliferation of low-cost colleges, and growing mismatches between enrolment and faculty capacity.

Inequalities have also widened. Rising costs of professional education have made high-return degrees inaccessible to poorer households, concentrating them in lower-return streams such as humanities and commerce. Faculty shortages further compound the issue, with student-teacher ratios far exceeding recommended norms in many institutions.

Regional disparities add another layer of complexity. In states like Bihar, Jharkhand, and West Bengal, limited access to quality education and weak local economies have made migration a necessity rather than a choice for many young people.

Importantly, the report challenges the binary framing of a “skills deficit” versus a “jobs deficit.” While skill gaps exist, the more binding constraint is the shortage of productive, formal, and well-paying jobs. Education and skilling investments alone cannot deliver outcomes without parallel expansion in labour demand.

Policy responses such as the National Education Policy (2020), the National Credit Framework (NCrF), and Apprenticeship Embedded Degree Programmes (AEDP) aim to bridge the gap between learning and earning. However, experts caution that these are only initial steps.

“Our experience while hiring suggests that youth unemployability is the biggest constraint due to lack of experiential learning that helps build both cognitive skills and domain knowledge. Inspite of having technical/ domain knowledge, graduates lack key horizontal skills – critical thing, solution mindset, decision making etc, which are required to unlock the human potential and for this academia needs to aligned is with industry as skills can’t be taught, it has to be acquired. The introduction of AEDP solves this problem, bit this needs a tripartite arrangement between student, industry and academia. Academia should build a bank of industrial connect to curate industry relevant programs and also for implementing them. Hands on learning is key to address the employability which smoothly transition from education to employment. University also has to focus on upgrading the skills through re skilling of existing workforce. As the shelf life of skills is shortening, continuous upgrading is non-negotiable. Hence, the role of academia which traditionally ended post student exit, which now has to co-exist as employability lifeline for life long,” reasons Sumit Kumar, Chief Strategy Officer, TeamLease Services Limited, a leading staffing solutions and recruitment company.

Ultimately, the school-to-work transition is a key barometer of labour market health. A smooth transition reflects a robust system; prolonged unemployment signals structural inefficiencies. SWI 2026 does not offer easy solutions, but it provides a vital evidence base for rethinking how India can align education, employment, and economic growth to truly realize its demographic dividend.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed
Previous Post

IInvenTiv 2026 opens at IIT (ISM) Dhanbad

Next Post

Gujarat’s Deputy CM lays foundation stone of ‘Fountainhead School Malgama‘s New Campus in Surat

education

education

Related Posts

NEET-UG 2026 Crisis: Government Reviews Re-Exam Preparedness Amid Expanding CBI Probe and Political Pressure
Spotlight

NEET 2026 Re-Exam: Air Force Transport, Quarantined Paper Setters and a Supreme Court watch

by education
June 8, 2026
World Environment Day: 18 ‘Namo Oxygen Parks’ in Delhi; urban greening initiatives through the development of Namo Vans and ecological assets across
Spotlight

World Environment Day: 18 ‘Namo Oxygen Parks’ in Delhi; urban greening initiatives through the development of Namo Vans and ecological assets across

by education
June 5, 2026
CBSE Class 12 OSM Re-evaluation Controversy Gravitating into a Major Political Storm
Spotlight

CBSE Class 12 OSM Re-evaluation Controversy Gravitating into a Major Political Storm

by education
May 29, 2026
NITI Aayog Report Flags Deep Faultlines in India’s School Education System, Emphasizes System-Wide Reform
School Edu

NITI Aayog Report Flags Deep Faultlines in India’s School Education System, Emphasizes System-Wide Reform

by education
May 19, 2026
NEET Crisis Round 2: Allegations of Paper Leak Spark Outrage as CBI Probe Nets Five
Spotlight

NEET Crisis Round 2: Allegations of Paper Leak Spark Outrage as CBI Probe Nets Five

by education
May 14, 2026
Next Post
Gujarat’s Deputy CM lays foundation stone of ‘Fountainhead School Malgama‘s New Campus in Surat

Gujarat’s Deputy CM lays foundation stone of ‘Fountainhead School Malgama‘s New Campus in Surat

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Useful Announcements

  • All
  • Useful Announcements

IIT Jammu launches a new B.Tech program ‘Unified engineering’

June 9, 2026

IIT Kanpur Launches Official JoSAA Counselling Helpdesk 2026; Open House Scheduled for June 9

June 8, 2026

IIT Mandi launches B.Tech programme in Quantum Science and Engineering

June 8, 2026

University of Wollongong India Opens Applications for Master of Financial Technology (FinTech)

June 8, 2026

Infiniti Mall, Malad ‘s 10-Day Book Fair with Bargain Book Hut from June 12-20

June 8, 2026
Coforge Opens Its 4th Public Library in India at Vasant Kunj, New Delhi

Coforge Opens Its 4th Public Library in India at Vasant Kunj, New Delhi

June 5, 2026

IIM Kashipur to Host 3rd ICBM 202) on “Driving Innovation, Digital Transformation, Resilience, and AI” on June 12-14

June 5, 2026

ITM Skills University launches AI-First MCA program

June 5, 2026

Accurate Group of Institutions introduces B.Com Program with Fintech and Digital Business Learning

June 5, 2026

“Hyundai Innovation Challenge 2026” for startups announced

June 5, 2026

Download current issue Not available

https://online.pubhtml5.com/jlyo/bxvr/

Monthly Magazine : Feb 2024

Interactive (Quizzes/Surveys)

Start Monthly Quiz
Education21

An initiative in continuation of Curriculum Magazine, Education21.in, is a platform for New India that aspires to be a valuable innovator, partner and collaborator for a just and sustainable world. Continuing with our steady and 360 degree coverage of education system and skills landscape, we are here more oriented towards learner community.

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Team
  • Contact
  • Editorial opportunities
  • Subscriptions
  • Job Opportunities
  • Features

Important Links

  • Blog
  • Archives
  • People
  • Careerwise
  • Resources
  • Downloadable
  • Old issues

Newsletter

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. Education21.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. Education21.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Cleantalk Pixel