1. The Basic Numbers
India has 1.46 billion people. Of those, about 56.2 crore (562 million) are employed. Another 4.6 crore are unemployed but actively looking for work. The remaining ~85 crore are outside the labour force entirely — students, homemakers, elderly, and children.
Men participate far more than women: 76.4% of working-age men are in the labour force, versus only 33.7% of women — though women’s participation has been rising in recent years.
| Metric | Number | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Total population | 146.4 crore | World’s most populous nation |
| Working-age (15+) | ~100 crore | 68.4% of population |
| Total employed | 56.2 crore | PLFS 2023-24 |
| Unemployed | 4.6 crore | Unemployment rate: 5.1% |
| Outside labour force | ~85 crore | Students, homemakers, elderly |
| Male LFPR | 76.4% | Labour force participation rate |
| Female LFPR | 33.7% | Rising but far below world avg of 51% |
| Urban unemployment | 6.7% | Higher than rural |
| Rural unemployment | 4.3% | Lower but more disguised |
2. Three Types of Workers
Every employed person in India falls into one of three categories:
Self-employed (58% — 32 crore workers). This is the largest group by far. It includes farmers, kirana shop owners, auto-rickshaw drivers, street vendors, tailors, and anyone running their own micro-enterprise. About 70% operate completely alone with no employees. Most earn between ₹8,500 and ₹18,000 per month depending on sector. Agriculture dominates — 17.5 crore self-employed workers are in farming.
Casual wage labour (20% — 11.5 crore workers). These are daily wage earners — construction labourers, farm hands, MGNREGA workers, and gig platform workers. They get paid per day or per task, with no contract, no continuity, and no protection. Average earnings around ₹9,500/month.
Salaried workers (22% — 12.2 crore workers). These are people with regular monthly pay — government employees, factory workers, IT professionals, teachers, nurses, corporate staff. But crucially, only about 3–3.5 crore of these 12.2 crore are truly “formal” — meaning they have a written contract, EPF, ESIC, and paid leave. The rest are informally salaried, with a monthly salary but no protections.
| Worker type | Workers | % of workforce | Avg monthly income | Key characteristic |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-employed — agriculture | 17.5 crore | 31% | ₹8,500 | Farmer, fisher, unpaid family |
| Self-employed — non-agri | 14.5 crore | 26% | ₹16,000 | Kirana, vendor, driver, tailor |
| Casual wage labour | 11.5 crore | 20% | ₹9,500 | Daily wage, no contract |
| Informal salaried | 5.3 crore | 9% | ₹12,000 | Monthly pay, no EPF/contract |
| Formal private (EPF) | 3.0 crore | 5% | ₹38,000 | Contract + social security |
| Government + PSU | 3.9 crore | 7% | ₹42,000 | Civil service, PSU employees |
| Total | 56.2 crore | 100% | ₹17,100 blended |
3. The Formal vs Informal Divide
This is the most important structural fact about India’s workforce.
Only 6–7% of all workers — about 3.5 crore people — are in fully formal employment. The rest, roughly 90%, work without legal contracts, social security, health insurance, pension coverage, or paid leave. One illness, one drought, one slowdown, and their income disappears entirely.
| Protection | % of salaried workers who LACK it |
|---|---|
| No written job contract | 58% |
| No social security (EPF/ESIC) | 53% |
| No paid leave | 47% |
| No health insurance (employer) | ~70% |
| No pension coverage | ~72% |
| Protection coverage | Workers covered | % of total workforce |
|---|---|---|
| EPF (provident fund) | ~7 crore active | ~12% |
| ESIC (health insurance) | ~4 crore | ~7% |
| NPS (pension) | ~2.5 crore | ~4% |
| Written employment contract | ~3.5 crore | ~6% |
4. India vs the World on Formal Employment
India’s informal employment rate of ~85% makes it one of the most informal large economies in the world — on par with Bangladesh and Pakistan, and far behind every developed economy.
| # | Country | Total workforce | Formal % | Informal % | Formal workers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Switzerland | 5.2 Mn | 95% | 5% | 4.9 Mn |
| 2 | Germany | 46 Mn | 94% | 6% | 43.2 Mn |
| 3 | Australia | 14.2 Mn | 93% | 7% | 13.2 Mn |
| 4 | France | 30 Mn | 91% | 9% | 27.3 Mn |
| 5 | USA | 167 Mn | 90% | 10% | 150.3 Mn |
| 6 | Japan | 67.8 Mn | 89% | 11% | 60.3 Mn |
| 7 | South Korea | 28.9 Mn | 84% | 16% | 24.3 Mn |
| 8 | Saudi Arabia | 16.2 Mn | 76% | 24% | 12.3 Mn |
| 9 | Brazil | 108 Mn | 60% | 40% | 64.8 Mn |
| 10 | China | 780 Mn | 52% | 48% | 405.6 Mn |
| 11 | Iran | 27.8 Mn | 54% | 46% | 15.0 Mn |
| 12 | Pakistan | 73 Mn | 24% | 76% | 17.5 Mn |
| 13 | Kenya | 20 Mn | 17% | 83% | 3.4 Mn |
| 14 | India | 562 Mn | 15% | 85% | 84.3 Mn |
| 15 | Bangladesh | 74 Mn | 12% | 88% | 8.9 Mn |
5. Government vs Private Employment
The public sector employs about 3.9 crore workers — just 6% of India’s total workforce. For comparison: China’s government employs 28% of its workforce, the US 15%, Brazil 13%. India is structurally under-governed relative to its population — a legacy of the post-1991 restraint on public hiring that was never reversed.
Making this worse, 1 in 5 sanctioned central government posts is currently vacant, and 89% of central government employees are Group C — clerks, peons, and technicians. India’s state apparatus is overwhelmingly frontline staff, not administrators or policymakers.
| Public sector segment | Employees | % of public sector |
|---|---|---|
| State governments (civil, police, schools) | 1.80 crore | 46% |
| Central PSUs (ONGC, SAIL, banks, etc.) | 1.40 crore | 36% |
| Central govt civilian (incl. Railways 13.1L) | 0.49 crore | 13% |
| Armed forces | 0.14 crore | 3% |
| Local bodies | 0.07 crore | 2% |
| Total public sector | 3.90 crore | 100% |
| Country | Govt employment as % of workforce |
|---|---|
| China | 28% |
| United States | 15% |
| Brazil | 13% |
| South Africa | 11% |
| Indonesia | 8% |
| India | 6% |
6. What People Actually Earn
The wide spread in incomes across sectors tells the real story of Indian inequality within the workforce. Real wages — adjusted for inflation — have been flat or falling for most workers since 2012, despite nominal wages rising by about 90%. Inflation ate all the gains.
| Sector / role | Avg monthly salary | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic / cleaning | ₹9,000 | Often cash, no contract |
| Agricultural self-employed | ₹8,500 | Highly seasonal |
| Casual wage labour | ₹9,500 | Daily wage, no continuity |
| Retail staff | ₹14,000 | Mostly informal |
| Private school teachers | ₹16,000 | Contract roles common |
| Factory / manufacturing | ₹22,000 | Varies widely |
| State government employees | ₹28,000 | Includes Group C staff |
| Healthcare professionals | ₹32,000 | Nurses to mid-level doctors |
| BFSI (banking, insurance) | ₹42,000 | Includes branch staff |
| Central government employees | ₹52,000 | Post 7th Pay Commission |
| IT / software professionals | ₹75,000 | Blended IT services avg |
| Gender | Avg monthly salary (salaried) | Gap vs male |
|---|---|---|
| Male | ₹23,100 | — |
| Female | ₹17,325 | 25% lower |
7. The IT Sector: A World Apart
India’s IT-BPM sector employs 58 lakh people — just 1% of the workforce. Yet it generates ₹8.5–9.5 lakh crore in annual wages, accounting for about 7.5% of India’s total wage bill. A single IT professional earns, on average, 7.3 times what the average Indian worker earns. Since FY23, IT hiring has contracted. Increment cycles have dropped from 10%+ to 4–5%. AI is creating genuine anxiety about long-term fresher absorption.
| Company | Employees | Annual wage bill | Avg cost per employee |
|---|---|---|---|
| TCS | 6.0 lakh | ₹1,40,131 crore | ₹23.3 LPA |
| Infosys | 3.2 lakh | ₹82,620 crore | ₹26.0 LPA |
| Wipro | 2.3 lakh | ₹46,000 crore | ₹19.7 LPA |
| HCL Tech | 2.3 lakh | ₹51,000 crore | ₹22.4 LPA |
| Tech Mahindra | 1.5 lakh | ₹27,000 crore | ₹18.2 LPA |
| IT role / experience | IT services | BPO/BPM | GCC / product |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fresher (0–2 yr) | ₹3.5–6 LPA | ₹2.5–4 LPA | ₹6–10 LPA |
| Mid-level (3–5 yr) | ₹8–15 LPA | ₹5–8 LPA | ₹15–22 LPA |
| Senior (6–9 yr) | ₹15–28 LPA | ₹7–12 LPA | ₹28–45 LPA |
| Lead / Manager (10+ yr) | ₹28–55 LPA | ₹10–18 LPA | ₹45–85 LPA |
8. The Total Wage Bill
India’s total annual wage bill is approximately ₹115–125 lakh crore (~$1.4 trillion), equal to about 39–42% of nominal GDP. The distribution is deeply unequal — the bottom half of the workforce earns about 26% of total wages despite being ~48% of all workers.
| Worker segment | Workers | Avg monthly ₹ | Annual wage bill | % of total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agriculture self-employed | 17.5 crore | ₹8,500 | ₹17.9 lakh crore | 15% |
| Non-agri self-employed | 14.5 crore | ₹16,000 | ₹27.8 lakh crore | 23% |
| Casual wage labour | 11.5 crore | ₹9,500 | ₹13.1 lakh crore | 11% |
| Informal salaried | 5.3 crore | ₹12,000 | ₹7.6 lakh crore | 6% |
| Formal private (EPF) | 3.0 crore | ₹38,000 | ₹13.7 lakh crore | 11% |
| Government + PSU | 3.9 crore | ₹42,000 | ₹19.7 lakh crore | 16% |
| Total | 56.2 crore | ₹17,100 blended | ~₹120 lakh crore | 100% |
| Country | Labour share of GDP | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| United States | 55% | Stable |
| Germany | 53% | Stable |
| China | 48% | Rising slowly |
| Brazil | 43% | Stable |
| India | ~40% | Declining since 2012 |
9. Has It Gotten Better or Worse? (2014–2024)
The honest answer: better on the surface, worse underneath. India got better at employing people. It got worse at employing them well.
| Indicator | Direction | What happened |
|---|---|---|
| Overall unemployment rate | ✅ Better | Fell from 6.0% (2017-18) to 3.2% (2023-24) |
| Female labour participation | ✅ Better | Rose from 23% to 37% — though mostly in low-paid agri work |
| Total jobs in absolute terms | ✅ Better | ~54 million net new jobs created 2019–2024 |
| Nominal wages | ✅ Better | Rose ~90% over the decade |
| Real wages (inflation-adjusted) | ❌ Worse | Flat to negative for most workers — inflation ate all gains |
| Quality of new jobs | ❌ Worse | Most new jobs were self-employed / unpaid family work |
| Salaried share of workforce | ❌ Worse | Peaked at 24% in 2019, has not recovered |
| Agriculture’s workforce share | ❌ Worse | Surged post-2020 as workers reversed migration back to farms |
| Formalisation | ❌ Worse | GDP formalisation at 56%, labour formalisation stuck at 15% |
| Educated youth unemployment | ❌ Worse | Rose from ~18% to ~29% for graduates under 29 |
The most important reversal: India was slowly moving workers out of agriculture into services and manufacturing — the classic development path. Post-2016 (demonetisation, GST disruption, and then COVID), this went into reverse. Workers flooded back to farms. A decade of structural progress was partially undone.
10. The Six Structural Fragilities
1. No floor under 90% of workers. No contract, no EPF, no ESIC, no unemployment insurance for the vast informal majority. One shock — illness, drought, slowdown — removes income entirely with zero state support.
2. Real wages fell for a decade. Self-employed real earnings declined 0.8–1.2% annually from 2012 to 2022. Salaried real earnings fell 4% over the same period despite 90% nominal growth. India’s workers are earning more rupees but buying about the same amount — or less.
3. Agriculture absorbs distress, not opportunity. The farm sector is India’s only social safety net. When urban jobs disappear, workers go back to farming. The post-2020 surge in agricultural employment was not productivity growth — it was reverse migration from cities.
4. Creeping informalisation inside the formal sector. Large firms are replacing permanent roles with contract and gig arrangements. EPF net subscriber additions have been falling since FY19. “Formal” employment is becoming less formal even within the formal tier.
5. Labour’s share of GDP is low and declining. Capital is capturing more of India’s output than labour. The economy can grow at 7% while median worker incomes stagnate. This has been happening continuously since 2012.
6. Both escape valves are closing. IT hiring has contracted since FY23, and AI threatens long-term structural absorption. Government headcount is shrinking through attrition and hiring restraint. The two ladders that most Indian families pointed their children toward are both getting shorter.
| Fragility | Scale of workers affected | Trend |
|---|---|---|
| No formal employment protection | ~48 crore workers | Worsening |
| No health insurance (any source) | ~35 crore workers | Slowly improving via PM-JAY |
| No pension / retirement savings | ~42 crore workers | Worsening |
| Real wage stagnation | ~50 crore workers | Persistent since 2012 |
| Educated youth unemployment (graduates) | ~29% of graduates under 29 | Worsening |
| IT structural risk from AI | ~58 lakh workers | Emerging, FY24 onwards |
The Core Paradox
India has one of the world’s fastest-growing GDPs and one of its most precarious workforces — simultaneously. These are not contradictory facts. They are causally connected.
India’s growth model is built on cheap, abundant, informal labour. That model delivers impressive aggregate GDP numbers while producing fragility at the individual level. The low labour costs that make India competitive globally are the same low wages and absent protections that keep most Indian workers vulnerable.
Until a genuine manufacturing employment boom at China’s scale arrives — or until comprehensive social security is extended to the informal majority — this fragility is not a problem at the margins. It is the foundation the economy is built on.