• 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 Skills

PMKVY’s Next Phase to Prioritise Women Entrepreneurs, Back Rural Enterprises: MSDE Secretary

education by education
April 30, 2026
in Skills, Spotlight
0
PMKVY’s Next Phase to Prioritise Women Entrepreneurs, Back Rural Enterprises: MSDE Secretary
0
SHARES
117
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The next cycle of the Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY), expected to roll out next year, will feature a dedicated entrepreneurship programme for women. The initiative aims to strengthen women-led enterprises and support rural women’s self-help groups, said Debashree Mukherjee, Secretary, Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE), at the launch of the report What Does it Take? Rural Women, Migration, and the Road to Work by Noida-based JustJobs Network. This study reveals that successful employment transitions require more than technical training and skilling.

The report draws on field research conducted among stakeholders of PRADAN’s Youth Employment Program (EEMPOWER), including workers, families, community leaders, and officials. The study spans source regions in Odisha’s Rayagada district and destination hubs such as Coimbatore, Hosur, Tirupur (Tamil Nadu), and Bengaluru (Karnataka), covering 97 respondents in total.

Five key insights from the study:

Aspiration development is foundational: Short duration residential programmes focused on building self-awareness and confidence, aligning job opportunities with individual interests, introducing basic financial management and gender awareness, and providing exposure to role models help rural women envision formal employment as possible and legitimate.

 Family consent is decisive: Migration for work remains a collective household decision. Transparency mechanisms, including exposure visits for parents, formal consent procedures, and group migration, are essential in securing family consent.

 The transition to formal work involves cultural displacement: Beyond contracts and entitlements, women struggle with homesickness, language barriers, unfamiliar food, and isolation, factors that significantly influence whether they retain their jobs.

Retention depends on the support ecosystems: Post-placement follow-up, particularly during the first six to twelve months, is critical. Help desk calls, peer networks, and alumni meets reduce early dropout rates and build long-term stability.

Information gaps undermine formality: Despite formal contracts, workers often lack awareness about promotions, salary structures, documentation, and progression pathways, limiting their ability to leverage employment gains.

Professional Assistance for Development Action (PRADAN), headquartered in Delhi NCR, runs the Youth Employment Program across multiple states, including Odisha and Bihar. The initiative addresses structural barriers to labour force participation among marginalised rural women through three pathways—Education, Employment, and Enterprise Promotion (3E). Under its employment component, the EEMPOWER initiative, launched in Odisha in 2023, has mobilised 7,675 young women, helping them build aspirations, develop skills, and connect with formal employment opportunities.

The programme emphasises communication skills, confidence-building, financial literacy, and awareness of gender norms, while also facilitating job placements and providing post-placement support.

Key recommendations from the report include:

Targeted outreach in education: Integrate career counselling into schools and colleges to encourage early aspiration development, enabling informed decisions about educational and vocational pathways aligned with labour market opportunities.

Sectoral diversification: Encourage entry into nontraditional, higher-paying sectors beyond apparel and healthcare through diverse success stories, early technical exposure, and expanded placement options within career guidance efforts.

Structured mobility support: Implement pre migration exposure visits and deploy local support staff in destination cities. Focus intensively on the first three months, addressing issues related to accommodation, food, and homesickness while engaging with families in the origin states.

Migrant alumni networks: Formalise peer support platforms and alumni meets to strengthen information-sharing and job retention, and to create structured dialogue spaces between workers, employers, and state institutions.

Employer partnerships and safeguards: Establish rigorous due diligence processes, workplace compliance checks, clear contracts, and responsive grievance mechanisms to sustain women’s participation and build long-term trust.

Inter-governmental coordination: Strengthen alignment between central, state, and local programmes to streamline mobilisation, reduce duplication, and improve recruitment efficiency through effective data-sharing mechanisms.

 Entrepreneurial pathways: Alongside wage employment, foster market-linked enterprises for rural young women via role models, financial literacy, credit access, and mentoring to position entrepreneurship as a growth-oriented option.

Voices:

Amarjeet Sinha, former Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development, stressed that lack of secondary education remains a key barrier to meaningful employment. He called for “second-chance” opportunities for youth aged 14–21, noting that nearly 75% either drop out or barely complete schooling. He proposed transforming secondary schools into community learning centres offering counselling, training, and career support after school hours. He also highlighted the untapped potential of women’s collectives under the Rural Livelihood Mission if better integrated with education, health, and nutrition systems.

Anurag Behar, CEO of Azim Premji Foundation and Chancellor of Azim Premji University, pointed to the deeper human dimensions of women’s employment journeys, cautioning that reducing such issues to numbers often obscures their complexity.

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

Amazon Future Engineer program expands to 2,200 scholars with 500 new scholarships for women in computer science

Next Post

College Board showcases New Student Pathway Initiatives at 2026 International Counsellor Workshops

education

education

Related Posts

The Invisible Crisis in School Governance: Why India needs a differentiated regulatory framework for its 3.4 lakh private schools
Perspective

The Invisible Crisis in School Governance: Why India needs a differentiated regulatory framework for its 3.4 lakh private schools

by education
July 5, 2026
NIIT Foundation and Bhual Singh Foundation partner to establish Uttar Pradesh’s First AI literate village in Jaunpur
Skills

NIIT Foundation and Bhual Singh Foundation partner to establish Uttar Pradesh’s First AI literate village in Jaunpur

by education
July 2, 2026
IMI Kolkata Partners with WBSRLM to Build Grassroots Entrepreneurship Capacity
Skills

IMI Kolkata Partners with WBSRLM to Build Grassroots Entrepreneurship Capacity

by education
July 1, 2026
IndiaSkills Competition 2026–27 launched; Registrations open on SIDH
Skills

IndiaSkills Competition 2026–27 launched; Registrations open on SIDH

by education
July 1, 2026
Team India Clinches 3 Gold, 1 Silver and 1 Bronze at Global Skills Challenge Australia 2026
Latest

Team India Clinches 3 Gold, 1 Silver and 1 Bronze at Global Skills Challenge Australia 2026

by education
June 29, 2026
Next Post
College Board showcases New Student Pathway Initiatives at 2026 International Counsellor Workshops

College Board showcases New Student Pathway Initiatives at 2026 International Counsellor Workshops

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Useful Announcements

  • All
  • Useful Announcements
AREF and GBSRC, Dr. D. Y. Patil Vidyapeeth Launch Nursery Teacher Training (NTT) partnership Program

AREF and GBSRC, Dr. D. Y. Patil Vidyapeeth Launch Nursery Teacher Training (NTT) partnership Program

July 2, 2026

Simplilearn Launches SkillUp – The AI-First Skilling Library

July 2, 2026

Registrations Open for CPC Algo Queen 2026; Deadline July 10

July 2, 2026
IndiaSkills Competition 2026–27 launched; Registrations open on SIDH

IndiaSkills Competition 2026–27 launched; Registrations open on SIDH

July 1, 2026
SANS Institute and DSCI undertake an in-depth study on Cybersecurity Skilling Landscape in India, report likely in early 2026

I4C-MHA with CBSE Launches Nationwide School Cyber Awareness Initiative

June 30, 2026

‘HACK CORE 2026’ by IIT Ropar’s ANNAM.AI, Syngenta and Google announced

June 29, 2026

‘Dancing Tales – Panchatantra’ to be staged at Ravindra Bharati, Hyderabad on July 3

June 29, 2026

Resonance Foundation Centre opens in Adilabad

June 29, 2026

Azim Premji University Launches Realising Rights: A Handbook of Welfare in India

June 28, 2026
Govt invites Applications for National Teachers Awards 2026

Govt invites Applications for National Teachers Awards 2026

June 28, 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