Technology, Jobs and Inequality: Evidence from India’s Manufacturing Sector
Kapoor, Radhicka | February 2016
Abstract
Faced with easier access to foreign technology and imported capital goods, firms in India's organised manufacturing sector adopted advanced techniques of production leading to increasing automation and a rise in the capital intensity of production. This has raised much concern about the ability of the manufacturing sector to create jobs for India’s rapidly rising largely low-skilled and unskilled workforce. However, what has attracted less attention in the literature is the impact of capital augmenting technological progress on the distribution of income and wage inequality. This paper attempts to fill this gap using enterprise level data from the Annual Survey of Industries. We find that with growing capital intensity of production, the role of labour vis-à-vis capital has declined. The share of total emoluments paid to labour fell from 28.6% to 17.4% of gross value added (GVA) between 2000-2001 and 2011-12, while, the share of wages to workers in GVA declined from 22.2% to 14.3%. Importantly, even within the working class, inequalities have increased. The share of skilled labour (non- production workers i.e. supervisory and managerial staff) in the wage pie rose from 26.1% to 35.8%, while that of unskilled labour (production workers) fell from 57.6% to 48.8% of total wage bill. However, it is not just the growth of capital intensity but another important, though independent change in the labour market (i.e. the rising share of contract workers) that explains rising inequality. Our results also underline the existence of capital-skill complementarity: firms with higher capital intensity employed a higher share of skilled workers and the wage differential between skilled and unskilled workers was higher in these firms.
Citation
Kapoor, Radhicka. 2016. Technology, Jobs and Inequality: Evidence from India’s Manufacturing Sector. © Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/9112.Keywords
Aid And Development
Asian Development Bank
Comprehensive Development Framework
Development Cooperation
Development Management
Development Planning
Development Strategies
Development In East Asia
Development Planning
Development Research
Green revolution
Commerce and Industry
Intra-Industry Trade
Large Scale Industry
Labor
Textile Industry
Rayon Industry
Cotton Industry
Clothing Industry
Rural planning
Aid coordination
Industrial projects
Infrastructure projects
Natural resources policy
Educational development
Development strategy
Development models
Economic development
Industrialization
Industrial Economics
Industrial Development
Industrial Policy
Weaving
Textiles
Textile Workers
Wool Industry
Silk Industry
Small Scale Industry
Medium Scale Industry
Local Industry
Export Oriented Industries
Shoe Industry
Clothing
Hosiery Industry
Fur Industry
Leather Industry
Income Distribution
Demographic Indicators
Communication in rural development
Communication in community development
Economic development projects
Development banks
Economic forecasting
Environmental auditing
Cumulative effects assessment
Human rights and globalization
Market share
Labor
Work clothes industry
Women's clothing industry
Children's clothing industry
Uniforms industry
Underwear industry
T-shirt industry
Sweater industry
Suspender industry
Sport clothes industry
Sleepwear industry
Shirt industry
Shawl industry
Men's clothing industry
Leather garments industry
Textile industry and fabrics
Fabrics
Cloth
Wool-growing industry
Garment industry
Apparel industry
Belt industry
Glove industry
Footwear industry
Social change
Social accounting
Inequality of income
Economic growth
Quality of Life
Green Revolution
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