India's small businesses drive jobs growth, wage gains curbed by inflation
Synopsis
India's small businesses in manufacturing, trade, and services sectors added 11 million jobs in the year ending September, growing employment to 120.6 million. Although job creation is seen, inflation limited wage growth. Small businesses' numbers rose significantly, playing a crucial role in the economy despite lower wages relative to the national average income.
The number of small manufacturing businesses, mainly family- owned units such as garment makers, auto component makers and food processing enterprises, grew to 20.15 million in the 2023/24 year from 17.83 million the previous year, the government report released on Tuesday showed.
Meanwhile, the total number of small businesses across manufacturing, trade and services grew to 73.4 million from 65 million a year earlier.
The survey covers the period from October 2023 to the end of September this year.
"The unincorporated non-agricultural sector, comprising small manufacturing, trade and other services, plays a crucial role in the economy... contributing significantly to employment," said Saurabh Garg, secretary at the Ministry of Statistics, while releasing the finding of the annual report.
During the survey period, the number of small businesses grew by 12.84%, while employment showed robust growth of more than 10%, Garg added.
However, wages were affected by inflation. The average annual wage in nominal terms per hired worker rose 13% in 2023/24 to 141,071 rupees ($1,656), reflecting a modest increase compared with annual retail inflation of about 5.5%.
Wages at small businesses, often located in rural areas and urban slums, remain much lower than the national average per-capita income of about $2,800. ($1 = 85.1410 Indian rupees)
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