* "ST workers have lowest average years of schooling" *

 Special Correspondent

 * Low level of education denies workers access to good jobs *

  NEW DELHI: Low level of education and poor access to land denies workers
access to ``good jobs" in the organised sector. Those with poorest access to
education and land are confined mostly to casual/manual labour with
socio-religious identity adding to their vulnerability, according to the
National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector.

The Commission in a report on "Conditions of Work and Promotion of
Livelihoods in the Unorganised Sector," says among the workers in the
unorganised sector, the Scheduled Tribes have the lowest average years of
schooling at 2.8 years, followed by Muslims Other Backward Classes (OBCs) at
3.8 years, Hindu Scheduled Castes at 4.1 years and Hindu OBCs. The upper
caste Hindu workers at 8.4 years, fared the best, The ST and SC people are
predominantly represented in wage labour, the Muslims are overwhelmingly
concentrated in self-employment.

The report has also found that women workers, especially those with lower
social and educational status, faced inherent disadvantages and systematic
discrimination in the labour market. Women in the unorganised sector have
poor earnings and poor working conditions. About 54 per cent of the regular
workers among women are domestic workers.

The other segment of disadvantaged workers dealt with in the report are
migrant, child and bonded labourers. About 8-10 per cent of the total
workers are seasonal migrants, who are poor and take recourse to migration
as a strategy for survival. The limited social networks of these migrants
further increase their vulnerability in the labour market.

The incidence of child labour has been on the decline in the country.
However, a large perspective of considering all out-of-the-school children
brings out the continuing nature of child deprivation. On the issue of
bonded labour, the report says that since the problem is defined by the
definition of bonded labour adopted, there was no credible estimate of the
magnitude of bonded labour yet available. Yet, the Commission views the
problem as huge in view of the overwhelming empirical evidence arising from
a number of studies and surveys.

Agricultural workers who are largely in the unorganised sector are an
extremely impoverished and vulnerable group. Within this group, agricultural
labourers are worse off than farmers as they are characterised by extreme
poverty levels. Farmers are slightly better off than the labourers as they
have some capital base in land. But marginal and small cultivators have very
little resource and also have to supplement their incomes through wage
labour. Their income levels are below their consumption level which leads to
high indebtedness among them.

The problems of farmers are compounded by the slow down in the agriculture
sector. Farmer needs credit to meet both consumption needs as well as for
production purposes. Increased indebtedness is noted as a reason for a spurt
in farmers' suicides during recent times across a number of States in the
report.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Ours is a battle not for wealth or for power.
It is a battle for freedom. It is a battle for the reclamation of human
personality."
- Dr BR Ambedkar
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