7 Reasons Why Unemployment in India Is Rising Faster Than Ever
Nidhi | Feb 13, 2026, 12:26 IST
Unemployment Rate in india
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India’s unemployment rate may appear moderate in 2026, but youth and educated unemployment remain alarmingly high. With millions entering the workforce each year and job creation struggling to keep pace, structural issues like skill mismatch, automation, informal employment, and population growth are deepening the crisis. This article explores updated 2026 data, government schemes, labour force trends, and the real reasons why unemployment in India is rising faster than ever.
India continues to grow at an estimated 6.5-7% GDP rate in FY 2025-26, positioning itself among the fastest-growing major economies. However, employment growth has not kept equal pace with economic expansion. According to the latest Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) released by the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementation, the overall unemployment rate in 2025-26 stands around 4.5-5% (usual status, age 15+). While this appears moderate globally, in a country of over 1.4 billion people, even a 1% change represents millions of individuals.
The deeper concern lies not in overall unemployment alone, but in youth, educated, and urban unemployment, which remain significantly higher than the national average.
India adds roughly 10–12 million young people to the labour force every year. However, job creation does not fully absorb this influx.
One of the most striking 2026 trends is that graduates face higher unemployment rates than those with minimal schooling.
India’s working-age population (15–59 years) continues to expand rapidly. While Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) has slightly improved — especially among women — job growth still struggles to match population growth.
In simple terms:
More than 80% of India’s workforce is engaged in informal employment. These include
India’s growth sectors - IT services, finance, digital platforms, and advanced manufacturing — are increasingly capital-intensive rather than labour-intensive.
Government initiatives such as:
India produces millions of graduates every year, yet employers consistently report skill gaps.
Common gaps include:
Government jobs remain highly attractive due to stability and benefits. However:
Data clearly indicates that educated youth — particularly urban graduates — face higher unemployment than the uneducated population.
The reasons are structural:
The deeper concern lies not in overall unemployment alone, but in youth, educated, and urban unemployment, which remain significantly higher than the national average.
1. Youth Unemployment Is the Core Problem
Harnessing India's youth boom as unemployment rates drop
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India adds roughly 10–12 million young people to the labour force every year. However, job creation does not fully absorb this influx.
- Youth unemployment (15–29 years): 12–15% nationally
- Urban youth unemployment: Often higher than 18–20%
- Some states report youth unemployment exceeding 20%
2. Educated Individuals Are More Unemployed Than the Uneducated
- Graduate unemployment (15–29 years): 15–25%
- Unemployment among less-educated workers: Often below 5%
- Less-educated workers quickly take informal or manual jobs.
- Educated youth seek formal sector or government employment.
- There is a mismatch between degrees and industry demand.
3. Labour Force Growth Outpaces Job Creation
Labour
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India’s working-age population (15–59 years) continues to expand rapidly. While Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) has slightly improved — especially among women — job growth still struggles to match population growth.
In simple terms:
- Required annual job creation: 10–12 million jobs
- Estimated formal job additions: Significantly lower
4. Informal Sector Dominates Employment
- Agricultural labour
- Daily wage workers
- Gig economy participants
- Small self-employed traders
- Work fewer hours than desired
- Earn unstable incomes
- Lack job security and benefits
5. Automation and Capital-Intensive Growth
Government initiatives such as:
- Make in India
- Production Linked Incentive Scheme
6. Skill Mismatch and Employability Issues
AI Really Taking Our Jobs
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India produces millions of graduates every year, yet employers consistently report skill gaps.
Common gaps include:
- Lack of practical industry exposure
- Weak technical proficiency
- Poor communication skills
- Limited digital adaptability
- Skill India Mission
- Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana
7. Government Job Preference and Limited Openings
- Lakhs to crores of applicants compete for limited vacancies
- Recruitment cycles are slow and highly competitive.
- Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act
Who Is More Unemployed in 2026?
The reasons are structural:
- Aspirational job preferences
- Degree inflation
- Limited formal sector capacity
- Skill-market mismatch