As a fully employed non-Indian non-woman, this really spoke to me
@nishant5411 ай бұрын
Non indian man fool. Everyone is not gender fluid who denies basic biology.
@dongshengdi77311 ай бұрын
No problem. I want to marry Indian women, give them $500 a month allowance
@hayleyxyz11 ай бұрын
@@dongshengdi773 have you considered just being attractive to women instead. You don't need to buy their loyalty via an "allowance" ugh.
@houseplant101611 ай бұрын
@@hayleyxyzLet him cook
@impressionare324311 ай бұрын
@@houseplant1016 He's not cooking
@rosesarelike11 ай бұрын
As an unemployed woman in india, this hits hard lol. I don't need to work, because my family is financially stable, and I don't really want to work for pennies for jobs I'm overqualified for. No one really questions it, I just waste my time doing nothing. But, also, feel very lost in life. :(
@pedroaugusto65611 ай бұрын
Fuck, talk about female privilege
@joeysworldsewer11 ай бұрын
You could always try to start your own business too
@rraj209511 ай бұрын
Use the disposable income to multiply wealth or increase rate of domestic savings. Occupational achievement is the primary motivator to be temporarily happy, peace and all comes later.
@SBImNotWritingMyNameHere11 ай бұрын
@@joeysworldsewer not in india lol good luck with the current market, over 95% chance you'll fail hard (not even break even) in all the major cities
@John_Smith_8611 ай бұрын
You are not overqualified for those jobs, lolz. What makes you think you deserve better?
@shlokbang149511 ай бұрын
The urban-rural divide in India is crazy, something you should also talk about. In Mumbai, where I live, these numbers would be almost shocking to a great chunk of people because they have no idea how bad the situation is for people in the rural sections of the country. Here, gender discrimination, at least for fresher jobs in media and tech, is unheard of. Our trains are usually filled with a healthy mix of both genders and I for one definitely see more women than men in my workplace.
@KRN00011 ай бұрын
Same in Delhi NCR.
@debodatta739811 ай бұрын
In America the rate is 49%, 49% of american women are unemployed. Also Indias rate varies heavily by state with the North Indian Hindi states of UP/Bihar/Haryana/Chandigarh all dragging the number down immensely with over 85% of women being unemployed.
@dv923911 ай бұрын
Rural women work alongside men at least here in Telangana It's the people in the cities who are always in the job search
@ven4161811 ай бұрын
Indian culture is predominantly family oriented, with mothers taking up the family responsibilities including raising the children. Studies have shown that full time motherhood increases healthy attitudes among children, for which they will be thankful. My 17yr old son thanks his mom and I for the healthy attention we gave him. My wife, despite having been highly educated, stayed home to raise him. I had to work extra hard but in the end it's worth it. My son is about to go college and he is transformed into a fine young man, thanks to his mother's undivided attention and teaching. In summary, this is also a choice of many families if their finances can afford it.
@anonymous_427610 ай бұрын
As far as I have seen, IT companies in India discriminate against men when hiring freshers. For example, women-only internships in companies like Salesforce (which are turned into jobs), women-only coding competitions, women-only jobs etc. This is mostly the case with MNCs and a few of the very high paying jobs.
@technojunkie12311 ай бұрын
This also correlates with the brain drain phenomenon India is also dealing with - if all these highly educated Indians leave for opportunities abroad because they can’t find suitable work domestically, then there’s less incentive to return and India risks losing that skilled worker for good
@briantarigan768511 ай бұрын
imagine, hordes of people from the subcontinent are working in sillicon valleys, but there are zero software companies coming from any countries in the subcontinent
@ArawnOfAnnwn11 ай бұрын
@@briantarigan7685 "zero software companies coming from any countries in the subcontinent" - lmao wut?! India has plenty of software companies. Our growth model is heavily built on software companies. We don't have a shortage of those, what we need is more manufacturing i.e. factories. More software companies isn't gonna achieve anything for us.
@A.S._Trunks11 ай бұрын
@@briantarigan7685 Ahh, comparing immigrants to "hordes". Always a classic!
@avinashtyagi211 ай бұрын
@@briantarigan7685Are you insane? India has tons of software companies. Didn't you watch the video, India has no lack of service oriented companies. What it lacks is manufacturing.
@debodatta739811 ай бұрын
In America the rate is 49%, 49% of american women are unemployed. Also Indias rate varies heavily by state with the North Indian Hindi states of UP/Bihar/Haryana/Chandigarh all dragging the number down immensely with over 85% of women being unemployed.
@951sht11 ай бұрын
As a student of a tier 1 college in India, this is precisely why I would soon have to also do a master's. The job competition is too high even among men, exacerbating the problem even more for women, and basically everyone. My personal belief is that we need to build our way out, as did China, the jobs will soon follow.
@PseudoProphet11 ай бұрын
Don't forget to vote the right person then.
@rutvikrs11 ай бұрын
@@PseudoProphetATMH🧡
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
@@PseudoProphet You mean Rahul
@jdamsel821211 ай бұрын
@@polaris1985 The economy was so good under Congress, I'm sure the dynastic moron born with a silver spoon will be even better than his dad, grandma, and great grandma. Pure delusion.
@ayushkumar-bg1xf11 ай бұрын
his name sugests that he is not foolish enough to do that mistake. liberandus does that mistake@@polaris1985
@nagendraraman641011 ай бұрын
My own sister was a Electrical and electronics student who finished her graduation with a good rank. The reason she was sent to study there was that she could earn stipends and the diploma was thought free of cost. She was eligible for a decent job but couldn't get one as she was the only girl in the batch moreover the company that trained her reduced its presence in india and the competition was fierce too. She finally got a job at a sales comapny where she quickly adapted to it , she was earning and got some benifits from the the company. Soon my mother started to force her to get married pushing my dad to arrange for her marriage. She got married at the age of 25 and her in laws and husband didn't allow her to work. I thought her working years were over but astonishingly she found a job at a computer hardware dealer where she has been working from an year. Now she is 33, she takes care of her 8 year old son and does all the house chores. Her husband doesn't earn much either and also doesn't help her with anything in the house. This video made me realize that this is a far greater problem that happens in every household in the country.
@thetangaledbug767011 ай бұрын
People are simply blindsided to all the problems here Nobody cares about seriously important issues like these Everyone is a pushover and seems to be okay with the utter state of this country Largest democracy in the world my ASS This is a culturally and economically failed state
@xXRealXx11 ай бұрын
wow, sounds like hell to be an Indian woman. So much BS "cultural" stuff
@Happiness.78911 ай бұрын
Deep cultural and social problem since ancient time.
@santhoshsridhar588711 ай бұрын
@@jackjones4824 But India's average working hours are already 52 hours. Many people work 60+ hours a week here.
@SuyashSharma811 ай бұрын
That is the same story for every middle class girl unfortunately. I hope she is able to provide a better future to her child and to herself also
@indobalkanizer655711 ай бұрын
This analysis literally X-rayed almost all aspects of Indian economy, society, culture and comparative economic history of India with Bangladesh and China, wow!
@Kalinga_311 ай бұрын
In India, 45% of STEM Education graduates are women. 37% of IT Workers in India are women. This proportions are higher even than many western countries. The lack of market incentives are stronger than 'culture'. India also has the highest proportion of women pilots in the world- which shows that where quality jobs are present, women do have incentives to work.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
@@Kalinga_3 He just said in the video only two types of women are working either very low income family ones which can't support their families by only men working like labourers the other ones are women who are highly educated and earn high salaries in service sector. The middle income ones are the ones not willing to work either in low quality jobs like maid, labourers or are not getting high paying jobs so they just decide to stay home and take care of the children and cooking. This is why bangladesh has 40% women employment because the garment industry employs all the women and it is not a shamefull job women look down upon.
@peterchui196411 ай бұрын
@@iamnotanundercoverfederalagent not really. These kind of topics have entire books written on them
@Happiness.78911 ай бұрын
@@Kalinga_3 always take positive feedback positively. It is well known fact he is talking about.
@saurabhade107911 ай бұрын
Congratulations, you have been fooled by coloniser propaganda. Well, not a surprise given your name suggesting your mind set
@sriramradhakrishna87811 ай бұрын
The point about the labour inspector corruption is spot on. I would even add on that a lot of the small business owners are in on promulgating this toxic environment because a mentality of 'We won't move forward and therefore we won't allow anyone to move forward' is prevalent in the community. My mom ran a B2B textile manufacturing business and the second she decided to expand from 8 to 15 employees, her competition informed the authorities who haggled her for bribes that amounted to a significant percentage of the company's liquidity, so she was forced to lay off her staff, reincorporate and pivot to a B2C model, which ran profitably until the same competition cheated her by placing orders with bouncing checks and strategically undercutting prices at the time. When she went to the cops, they demanded a bribe that would ultimately make her company go bankrupt so she decided to liquidate everything and exit. We really need to come to terms with our internal toxicities toward each other. We saw it with Prithviraj Chauhan 900 years ago and we're still seeing it today.
@surajbiradar982711 ай бұрын
License raj and non sense labour laws allow these scumbag "inspectors" To exist.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
Same thing happened with my Uncle, RIP!
@puraLusa11 ай бұрын
That's a good point. It actually explains a lot for someone who observes from the outside like me. Thanks for the testimony.
@dheerajpimoli953911 ай бұрын
But now labour laws have been eased right on central level
@rexmann198411 ай бұрын
Having your women enter the workforce is a hidden death trap. Fight it!
@azmodanpc11 ай бұрын
Something similar is happening here in Italy. Wages are stagnating since the 70s and part of the reason is the size of companies: bigger companies are more regulated and too many employers prefer having fewer workers in order to skirt regulations and avoid taxes. The net result is that many are self employed and mainly work for a company, making them a de facto employee.
@christianweibrecht655511 ай бұрын
I wonder why Italy never embraced libertarian economic policies, would pair well with its culture
@zuz-ve4ro11 ай бұрын
@@christianweibrecht6555it pairs with anarchism/libertarian socialism, which was exceptionally early and strong in Italy. Spanish anarchists which were major part in Spanish civil war largery derived their politics from Italy or were Italian themselves. "working yourself to death but at least it's not government's boot" is more American than Italian
@christianweibrecht655511 ай бұрын
@@zuz-ve4ro socialism will never succeed in societies that lack strong civil cohesion & spirit
@fatboyRAY2411 ай бұрын
@zuz-v4ro You and I must have very different understandings of what “working yourself to death” means. Didn’t know 40hrs a week and triple the income constituted as such.
@puraLusa11 ай бұрын
@@christianweibrecht6555socialism will never succeed cause state capitalism is in itself unproductive and distruction. Some socialist measures are pretty healthy overall - most just increse burocracy and block organic development of an economy.
@Dr.Kraig_Ren11 ай бұрын
This is extremely correct. I have 2 elder sisters, both are well educated, but just not enough to earn a salary nearly equal to my dad, so they are stuck at home (one of them is married), trying to study and get a better job that makes leaving home, away feom your family, reasonable.
@zetaforever495311 ай бұрын
Your dad has presumably been working for several decades. No matter how educated you are, you'll never earn equal to an experienced professional as a fresher. This is regardless of gender. I started working at the age of 23. My salary was 10k. At the time my father earned 1.2 lakhs. Now I'm 29 and earn around 70k per month, my dad earns 1.5 lakhs. He will retire three years later and I don't think I'll be able to match his salary before he retires. And that's perfectly natural. Your dad wouldn't be earning what he earns now if he waited around to find a job that paid him equal to his dad from day 1. That's just not realistic for most people.
@dongshengdi77311 ай бұрын
No problem. I want to marry Indian women, give them $500 a month allowance
@rishabdhar690011 ай бұрын
This is the same in the West. There are more women "employed" as whores and only fans models than women teachers. Let that sink in. In last two months I fucked two women for money - one was working as Project Manager in IT company and another as a Psychologist, how many men would be able to sell their body for money? The fact is women do not want to work like men, feminism was only about slavery of men to fulfill material needs of women.
@someguycalledcerberus980511 ай бұрын
Does your family worry about the "honour" implications of the daughters working away from home, or do the women simply not want to work for a lower salary? Not trying to invalidate you or to be antagonistic, I'm just wondering how widespread is the belief that it is improper for women to work. I'd think that if they're allowed to study, they should also be allowed to work. Much more promiscuity happening on campus than on the shop floor.
@saikatghosh907311 ай бұрын
@@someguycalledcerberus9805It's not specifically about Honour culture (Eventhough it's prevalent in India but in a very different way). Women don't work because the kind of job available to them. For Highly educated women, it's easy to find a job in an IT company, teaching etc and parents would even allow her for lower pay. Reason work environment is extremely suitable, you work in an Air conditioned room, fellow female colleagues etc etc. The problem comes for not so highly educated women. They only passed High school or pursued a useless degree like Political science,History etc. Now I would separately explain the scenario for the two categories 1) Useless degree- They are graduates but Don't Market related skills to get a White collar job. They can't go into a construction site,Farm or Manual labour because they are over qualified for that. It would be extremely embarrassing for the person too, when he would realize her fellow workers are not even half as qualified as her. So either they prepare for government job but the vacancies are less and the competition is intense. Only job left is teaching which couldn't engulf the whole women work force. Plus the work conditions are hazardous for life and if she has a baby, it naturally becomes a smarter choice to invest your energy on household work. 2) Till High school education: They are not eligible for Teaching or government but they do have basic Mathematic and language skill to work in a factory but the labour laws are so strict that there are no big manufacturing factors (as mentioned in the video). Now they can't go to such hazardous jobs too and her spouse does a decent enough job to sustain the family. So naturally they end up being house wife. One Cultural factor too : It's perceived as dent on a man's competence to provide for his wife and Family. People would taunt the guy by saying "Is your salary so low that your wife has to work to sustain the family?? Such a shame". Even in our Hindu wedding, the husband takes a vow that he is going to take responsibility of her wife's well being (Btw I am curious on what kind of vow you guys in Christian wedding)
@anshulpandey111 ай бұрын
That U curve is 100% correct. We shifted from agriculture to service sector directly but now government is trying hard to bring manufacturing jobs and developing infrastructure for that too. I hope they succeed and we see the results soon. The intresting thing which I found is most companies prefer less than 10 works due to regulations. I think this is mostly true for manufacturing sector but some service based companies also do the same.
@christianweibrecht655511 ай бұрын
maybe India could create special economic zones that have minimal regulations like China did
@anshulpandey111 ай бұрын
@@christianweibrecht6555 yes the government has made some special economic zones for manufacturing and service sector as well but they need to make much more.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
A stat he missed was urban population is less than 36% right now, need to expand the smaller cities now, Delhi Mumbai already too big and its not a good idea to keep expending them for the next 36%.
@artman1211 ай бұрын
Manufacturing is absolutely essential to give better jobs to the masses of less-educated people. Some states like Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Maharashtra and even Uttar Pradesh now are trying a lot to attract manufacturing companies. But then there’s Bihar- the poorest state with the most unemployed workforce driving businesses away even though it needs these job-creating businesses the most. Other states which used to be manufacturing hubs like Punjab and West Bengal are actually going through de-industrialization as they’re wrongly prioritizing giving more freebies to farmers and others while neglecting the manufacturing industry. In Kerala, rules and regulations with the strongly anti-business atmosphere is driving businesses away- Kitex, which was the pride of Kerala’s garment manufacturing decided to relocate to Telangana.
@annabethchase256911 ай бұрын
I mean, if construction can be done effectively on manufacturing infrastructure, we still have a good chance. Service jobs can bring in capital. But we need another Make In India/Make For India push. I wonder why all that stopped 4-5 years ago.
@ezraanderson10011 ай бұрын
I lived in India for a year. I saw that nearly all woman aged 50+ were stay-at-home Moms, but almost all of the teenager girls were hoping to enter the workforce after college. If employment opportunities can increase, the young women of India would love to have careers! 🇮🇳
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
Problem is those teen girls are all studying and will go to college and will expect a job in the service sector at a decent salary so they can sustain their expenses of living alone in a city and thats the problem because of limited job creations in the service sector of India and I think new jobs will come in the manufacturing sector of India which they might not want to work in, that is why you need one generation to work in the factories and the next generation goes to service sector to work in offices in the corporate world. India is doing it all wrong.
@bobSeigar11 ай бұрын
Already a workforce crunch, and you want to further stress that? You know that is quite literally a race to the bottom, and the main reason the US is failing.
@xerogue11 ай бұрын
@@polaris1985they'll just move to another country. Braindrain
@Kathakathan1111 ай бұрын
My mom sees. Like stay at home mother. She is 53. But she manages her own investments she earned all these years. She is enjoying her early retirement and has plans to start her own new business in next few years, the land is purchased. She is taking it slow. But nothing wrong with it. She is also healing from few health conditions and it’s better we address it now rather than later. The fact that woman will be valued only if she is working in corporate is stupid. Many fo my aunts SEEMs as at home mothers. But they also have investments in real estate and have their own way of living life. Earning money. One even earns by teaching yoga. Another by investing in new businesses, she knows the textile sector and she invests in new boutiques. It’s funny that few of my aunts who worked corporate actually belittle other women, when they actually earn more, employ more ethically and treat the employees as family.
@Kathakathan1111 ай бұрын
@@xerogueno, we women don’t necessarily move to another country. If one avoids mega city, rest of teh places are good enough to have a decent job and survive on that salary and save. World forgets that Indians have tendency to save and invest and not splurge. That helps. And most people in mega city have to get married, because it’s haughty impractical to give that much of rent for one single person.
@arjavgarg580111 ай бұрын
Being an Indian interested in the topic, no one else and I mean not one person has explained the issues like you have.
@darthvadeth629011 ай бұрын
Indian society needs to keep the women unemployed and stay home so they can make babies and serve Indian men.
@_Mohit_Joshi11 ай бұрын
You still believe "unsafe for women" and "purity of women" are legitimate? They are outdated and unproven rhetorics, and Polymatter did no research. No neutrality
@joshuatheunkownuniverse.247511 ай бұрын
You dont search more i guess. There are many indian think tank youtube.
@arjavgarg580111 ай бұрын
@@joshuatheunkownuniverse.2475 none of them have this presentation
@saurabhade107911 ай бұрын
*which is a typical neo liberal colonizer point of analysing, not from point of family or broader perspective of prosperity and happiness.
@skipperson407711 ай бұрын
I worked several weeks in India helping to train mostly recent women college graduates. I was told that only a couple years before I was there, 90+% would be married within a year of graduation and the personal section of the local papers weren't people looking to date but rather looking to get married and college degrees were often stated requirements. The manager I worked mostly closely with, a 30-something year old man was actively being married off by his mom, looking for a Bengali-speaking (the family's primary language) college graduate that had no work ambition, so he could pick and move if necessary for better work. That came into play when he later moved to Finland for work and new wife went with him. Within the work groups women could move up and be promoted, there were some good female managers, but many women in my group were too shy and not forward enough to become those managers. We weren't paying these young women much money by western standards but that money was starting to cause a revolution, increasing possibilities for young women, first purchase usually a moped, and it turned out that most of these women employed a (usually illiterate) woman to take care of household chores like cleaning and meal prep. whereas back in the US I made a lot more money but still washed my own clothes, cleaned toilets etc.
@aravindpallippara157711 ай бұрын
I didn't realise how pathetic men's involvement in household chores was till I moved out of my home and started living with a roommate My father is impatient and can't stand my ADHD mother's(and mine) pace of house work, so he basically does everything - but apparently I am excellent at house hold chores when compared to my roommate lol who has a stay at home mother doing everything for him
@kvineet63111 ай бұрын
Those "illiterate" women are on the extreme left of the U graph. Their participation in the workforce is immense, especially in cities. They never sit at home as they can't afford to and the labor market being cheap makes their services affordable which is not the case in developed nations. These women are employed, the high paid women are employed, the issue is with those who are in between. Their lives aren't bad enough to push them into the low paying jobs but also not good enough to compete for the high paying ones and if they can marry a man who can keep them there then staying in that limbo is socially acceptable.
@youngcaptainkeos213311 ай бұрын
As a man who has lived in India for his entire life. This perspective of why there is low labor among women was very interesting
@nobodythenobody977911 ай бұрын
It sounds like they don’t want to work
@harisadu899811 ай бұрын
@@nobodythenobody9779 Yeah they don't.
@nobodythenobody977911 ай бұрын
@@harisadu8998 reading the comments from Indian women here, most say it’s not worth their time
@fanban292611 ай бұрын
@@nobodythenobody9779No, they do, they just don't want to be slaves. Getting paid nothing isn't working, that's slavery.
@yellowcatmonkey11 ай бұрын
@@nobodythenobody9779 1. who does?😸 2. and who does for free?🤷
@vaibhavpatel454111 ай бұрын
As an Indian, I really liked your analysis. In fact, I like almost all of your videos and would like you to make more videos on India like this, just like you do with China's. Thank you.
@Agorax_gg11 ай бұрын
Our KZbinr is just so smart
@rutvikrs11 ай бұрын
This isn't him doing the research. He found a pre existing academic paper which talks about this issue. KZbinrs don't create things from scratch 😂
@christianweibrecht655511 ай бұрын
hopefully there is a possible feed back loop where increased information helps India improve itself which makes it more relevant thus increasing interest
@kb988011 ай бұрын
@@rutvikrs Would you rather the video NOT based on peer-reviewed research?
@saurabhade107911 ай бұрын
This explains why China is cracking down on typical western neo liberal companies that do such kind of shoddy research job and not allowed KZbin on its soil. India needs to at least create competition to KZbin which boosts neo liberals lik this who prommote fraud think tanks and suppress other point of view.
@crocsAreUgly11 ай бұрын
Spot on, would like to add that a lot of urban families who send their daughters to college to learn DO want their daughters to work, from what I've seen. What I've seen at least in my social circles is that the women may even end up getting a job, but then they get married and the default expectation is that she won't work anymore due to having to do all the household chores and such. This problem is exacerbated with kids. Having kids is also a default expectation, and women who hold on to their jobs even after marriage by balancing both household chores and their jobs often have to let go when the kid comes into the equation because looking after the child is also in their hands now. Very, very few are able to hold on after this point. And for those who do, it is a living hell-- balancing their jobs, household chores and kids means waking up earlier than everyone else and sleeping after everyone else, all in all no rest whatsoever. Even on holidays, the women have to work the house. Another point worth adding is that since there is a cultural expectation for men to be the breadwinner and support their family as well, even if the family is barely scraping by on the income earned having a conversation with your wife where you both might consider going to work is just not a thing that you do.
@debodatta739811 ай бұрын
In America the rate is 49%, 49% of american women are unemployed. Also Indias rate varies heavily by state with the North Indian Hindi states of UP/Bihar/Haryana/Chandigarh all dragging the number down immensely with over 85% of women being unemployed.
@anuragchakraborty876611 ай бұрын
Why do so many Indian women get married instead of setting up their respective careers? Indian women need to stop marrying and start focusing on financial stability.
@dharanishakthivel726311 ай бұрын
@@debodatta7398You're going around to every comment to say this, and it's added little to nothing to the conversation.
@tankomanful11 ай бұрын
India faces a significant challenge in the coming years as advancements in AI technology will render many services currently offered by its workforce to Western countries obsolete. AI's ability to understand and communicate effectively will lead to the replacement of roles in tech support and customer service industry. This shift will have a profound impact on the Indian labor market, especially for those serving the US market. The transition period has already started and you cannot imagine how bad this will hit India.
@abhishekpowar273311 ай бұрын
After you factor in the damage this could potentially (and most likely, will) cause to the Indian economy, and the country as a whole, I think it would be an understatement to say that we're headed towards absolute disaster.
@ujjwalkumar162411 ай бұрын
well india is transitioning to manufacturing and building infrastructure at faster rate than ever before , so i dont think we will hit a wall .
@SamRichardson199011 ай бұрын
AI Companies now owned by Indians.
@dhruv533511 ай бұрын
spot on. unless we can harness that “window of opportunity” as mentioned in the video before ai is powerful enough to replace service-related jobs, we’re headed for a nasty economic shock
@understanding.everything10 ай бұрын
😂😂 Indians will make ai useless keep watching
@RealCosmosry11 ай бұрын
Thank you for bringing to light what most people fail to see in India itself ❤
@tibontibon577211 ай бұрын
Entry level jobs pay pennies for full time work in india, people who are career focused are forced to go through that initial hell. Hence many young women whose parents are financially stable simply prefer to remain unemployed, get married and become a housewife rather than to suffer in this hell of an job market.
@user-op8fg3ny3j11 ай бұрын
Only misandrists think that housewife is degrading work when it is actually the most fulfilling
@ahmednadim585911 ай бұрын
Bro. You're talking about upper middle class women. Almost of India's population is still rural.
@DolphinsAreBetterThanHumans11 ай бұрын
@@ahmednadim5859true. Majority of india is still rural which op doesn't know about or care enough to understand it
@tibontibon577211 ай бұрын
India's urban population is at 35% with villages being more urbanised than ever. There are employment opportunities everywhere. It's just that for some women it's just not worth it.
@axvingaming15211 ай бұрын
That issue is not exclusive to India, it's everywhere and pay depends on the cost of living (usually just enough to cover basic necessities and a bit more). My parents went through the same thing but eventually it worked in favour of them and for quite a long time, my mum earned more than my dad even though they both had similar educational backgrounds.
@duyin651311 ай бұрын
You have hit the mark. Now that I think about it, I've seen too many cases where an educated women don't pursue jobs or resign their jobs after marrying someone with decent salary. Based on personal experience, I think as a society we have moved away from the 'honour' thing. Even in conservative villages, women are being expected to provide/add to the household. The economy however still seems to be a bit of a problem. I just feel that we have failed to bank on the manufacturing sector despite having a large workforce as a result of late liberalization of economy.
@ATrivedi-sp9hs11 ай бұрын
Even in india ,men are not able to sustain family because of growing housing and livelihood expense , there is intense competition for jobs even for low paid jobs Well u nicely explained about reason rather than creating controversy
@doujinflip11 ай бұрын
Which will put rising pressure against the patriarchy trap, and hopefully by the time those household incomes rise, there will be more acceptable and pay for women to stay employed.
@darthvadeth629011 ай бұрын
Indians are always so worried about controversy, yet y'all do things like annex Kashmir or assassinate people in other countries.
@hellgorama11 ай бұрын
No, all women entering workforce will go is even further devalue labor and cause further inflation for basic necessities. It will also make it difficult to have a family. What needs to happen is society needs to understand that being a family caregiver is far more important than being some high-powered corpo.
@puraLusa11 ай бұрын
@@hellgoramathan make it law with payment being wife, as a profession with rights and obligations, with a salary and insurance etc. If u can't than don't block someone just cause that person so happens to have a uterus.
@jorge6969611 ай бұрын
@@hellgorama You could also improve the economy and productivity by enslaving a bunch of people. Women are humans too and deserve to live free of discrimination. If your economy and culture requires that women be treated like second class citizens to stay afloat, it has failed already.
@luvdocumentary11 ай бұрын
I never thought of the consequences of skipping manufacturing and going straight to services. It’s an intricate ecosystem.
@story-ju9cu11 ай бұрын
As an Indian women The main factor for women doing less job especially in states like UP, Bihar(highest populated states) is obsession of parents with Gov Job as they are considered as safe and respectful rather than demeaning. So in general women are preferred in the filled of Teaching, Doctor, Engineering ,IAS,IPS, Banking, or any other high profile Government jobs, apart from that any other job is seen as not honorable and safe. So there are very few gov job available cuz of high competition and reservation So in general after marriage they stop working,as they consider private sector as unsafe for women So if parents obsession with Gov jobs not end nothing can be done about that . Now people mentality is changing so i hope there will be some
@NativeBharatiye11 ай бұрын
And 50% of UP start ups are female owned or a female co founder higher than any western country.
@bunk958 ай бұрын
Tell the slave they have a home life?
@story-ju9cu8 ай бұрын
@@bunk95 what are u trying to imply?
@thegreatestdemon12888 ай бұрын
@@bunk95 what's 'bout western girls who sell their bodies on onlyfans websites 😂
@bjolly892411 ай бұрын
This is so sad and depressing. In America almost every single privately owned gas station/convenient store is run by an Indian family. Such nice people. I go out of my way to do business with these people because I know I'm contributing to a family and not some thankless heartless corporation.
@girl463211 ай бұрын
Cause their they get safe from Indian mentality
@sleepyfella11 ай бұрын
I would rather go to walmart/other chain stores because then my money will be helping my own countrymen who are employed there to get better wages
@bjolly892411 ай бұрын
@@sleepyfella Wow!!! That's so bizarre that anyone would think that going to Walmart is a good thing.
@beab873811 ай бұрын
They're all the same. Small convenience stores bevome big corporate stores too. Samsung started that way and a few Indian owned group companies in my country started that way too. Save your money for yourself. No-one deserves your money more than the person that worked for it. Pay yourself by aiming for financial freedom and early retirement.
@pipipupu510410 ай бұрын
@@sleepyfella who's your countrymen white people
@Kalinga_311 ай бұрын
To give a sense, there were 44 Central labour laws until 2020 and still are 100's of laws & regulations at State levels, each differ where you are. This makes reforms very difficult as labour inspectors operate in State & District jurisdiction level.
@pranavingale685010 ай бұрын
Unfortunately those labour codes you talking about are still not implemented!
@RocketsNRovers11 ай бұрын
as a indian in early 20s , i found this really accurate and eye opening
@sarojeetdash11 ай бұрын
As a proud Indian citizen it was difficult for me to watch the first half of this video. But your analysis seems to have some valid points. India needs a major reform to its old laws derived from distorted communist mindset during the "license raj". Our MSMEs need to become bigger with 1000+ employees without government interference.
@kingskod11 ай бұрын
whats the point in being proud when you cant take valid critisizm
@92_0911 ай бұрын
Proud Lodu… guu ke keede
@CastorRabbit10 ай бұрын
@@kingskod I wouldn't be proud myself but to be fair, he took the criticism pretty constructively
@inbb5103 ай бұрын
Abolish the caste system
@pikachuthunderbolt39197 ай бұрын
Women doing jobs in private firm are considered unhonourable and unrespectful Deeply rooted societial problem.
@thisisaperson96327 ай бұрын
Not just a social problem, a cultural problem. And one that's deep rooted enough to require intense effort to remove entirely.
@vidhanmehta996011 ай бұрын
Great explanation of a nuanced, tricky issue. Well done
@josephmelton472111 ай бұрын
Not really that tricky at all. Women stay home when they can. Because the whole mother thing yanno?
@TonyStarkPro11 ай бұрын
@@josephmelton4721Grandparents can take care of child issue yanno
@riplikatlnloki509111 ай бұрын
@@josephmelton4721Bangladesh has the same cultural bias. Clearly that’s not the only reason
@gyanashekka11 ай бұрын
As a working professional in India, I occasionally find myself inspired by those who truly live their lives to the fullest despite not being part of the workforce.
@someguycalledcerberus980511 ай бұрын
I think anyone would be inspired by this. You work to live, not live to work. If you can live your life to the fullest without working, you should be doing that. The problem is if unemployment is preventing you from living your life to the fullest.
@sudheerkumar442111 ай бұрын
"those who truly live their lives to the fullest despite not being part of the workforce." definition of rich
@MOBXOJ11 ай бұрын
Waiting for the “you’ve summoned 1 billion people 🤓🤓” comments
@VishalSharma-gj3wo11 ай бұрын
you've summoned 1 billion people 😂
@Pyth11011 ай бұрын
Waiting for the "can we just take a moment to appreciate" comments
@Dr.Kraig_Ren11 ай бұрын
Only 700 million Indians have internet and only 400 million use KZbin
@demo_AAA11 ай бұрын
@@Dr.Kraig_Ren☝️🤓
@Knnnkncht11 ай бұрын
@@Dr.Kraig_Ren but they have designated shitting streets in India
@JaspalSingh-og5wb11 ай бұрын
I am surprised that a non Indian KZbinr has found the actual reason to this problem..
@PHlophe11 ай бұрын
Jaspaal, he is half Gori.
@rutdvajrawal793311 ай бұрын
As an Indian man. Indian men around me won't even recognise this as an issue
@vivek-42011 ай бұрын
Thank You for covering this topic PolyMatter, I hope government sees this and works on this crucial issue that is presenting as a roadblock to India’s growth. Focusing on Women Safety should be paramount.
@Orhan612511 ай бұрын
You really work hard to maintain such thorough and interesting research into little known topics. Huge props to your channel.
@shubhamnarayan207711 ай бұрын
Great explanation. Manufacturing is picking up so fingers crossed. Services are good for uplifting the middle class but the number of jobs is not going to increase in services because there is literally no need of extra work force in services sector. Manufacturing sector is the only sector which can employ in mass.
@artman1211 ай бұрын
True. But manufacturing is only increasing in specific states like Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh. States which used to be manufacturing hubs like Punjab and West Bengal are seeing their manufacturing decreasing as they prioritize giving freebies to farmers and others over creating and nurturing businesses. Then there’s Bihar.
@eugeneng706411 ай бұрын
@@artman12manufacturing is only half the equation. Logistics is the other half. India will need an efficient transportation system to move vast quantities of material and goods from the ports to the factories and from the factories back to the ports. China had 40 years to perfect this and they're staying on top of it, which is why they're still highly competitive in mid-level manufacturing and they've broken into high level manufacturing, producing electric cars and now microchips.
@artman1211 ай бұрын
@@eugeneng7064 The Indian government is now investing considerably to developing dedicated railway freight corridors and expressways to transport goods from the interior to the ports efficiently. But it’s less than China because India started developing these infrastructure projects only recently.
@eugeneng706411 ай бұрын
@@artman12 how are her ports doing? And the bureaucracy? İf India cannot build/develop good deep water ports and cut all the red tape/corruption all that effort is for naught
@rishavkumar125011 ай бұрын
@@eugeneng7064our bureaucrats , mostly lower level ones are massively corrupt
@jacob4070-v5p11 ай бұрын
3:18, the moment that makes all Polymatter videos special - that taking of conventional expectations, as he calls it, "Case: Closed" and digging much deeper. You do an incredible service for any topic you cover.
@Kalinga_311 ай бұрын
One more thing to add These labour laws were reformed in 2020 by Central Govt, but most state Govt have not followed suit. These labour inspectors operate under State level jurisdiction. Thus pushing reforms in India's labour sector is very difficult.
@debodatta739811 ай бұрын
In America the rate is 49%, 49% of american women are unemployed. Also Indias rate varies heavily by state with the North Indian Hindi states of UP/Bihar/Haryana/Chandigarh all dragging the number down immensely with over 85% of women being unemployed.
@yashaswinikrishnan187811 ай бұрын
this was a really good video. I would like to add some points : 1. since the marriages are arranged, the women have to migrate to a different place 99% of the times which makes them quit their existing job, if they were allowed to have any in the first place. 2. most college goers are married off as soon as they graduate as graduation is only a thing to put in your matrimonial resume 3. most men and their families prevent women from working saying that he earns enough for both of them, while constantly nagging about the meagre income. happens in most households. There is complete control over finances. Women live off of meagre pocket money given by their husbands which might range from as little as 500-5000 rupees per month. Most women don't have a bank account either. 4. most in laws live with the couple and make it a very toxic environment and pressue the couple to produce children, preferably male (because women are burden), this is to be done within a year or it would be a dishonour. and as soon as the kid is born the woman is made to sit at home and do everything from a-z as the husband commands her to do every tiny job of his. 4. Most parents mildly enforce STEM or management courses on their children irrespective of gender which obviously trains them for the service sector. The children would feel that they don't deserve to work in a manufacturing sector as it doesn't match what they studied for and it doesn't pay as much as a service job does. it's also about honour and reputation which comes with being an engineer or a doctor or lawyer. I recommend watching Soch by mohak mangal's video on the same.
@NaveenNT11 ай бұрын
This is a well made video. You touched almost all aspects of the employment issue. Sadly India at the current rate looks like will miss the demographic dividend.
@saurabhade107911 ай бұрын
If any video talks about demographics dividend and GDP per capita or permanent and/or high salarised job in non contradictory way you should run away from that video as fast as possible
@HhshhsHh-dw3qq11 ай бұрын
@@saurabhade1079wtf?
@accountthatillusetocomment304111 ай бұрын
Incredibly insightful. It's really sad that India has stunted it's own development by so much years by preventing manufacturing from taking off. India should've done the same as Bangladesh, the entire world would benefit from it.
@Praisethesunson11 ай бұрын
India is one of the world's largest pharmaceutical manufacturers on the planet.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunson India is also the most populated country on the planet.
@avinashtyagi211 ай бұрын
India is working to try and fix that error, which is why attracting Foxconn is such a big deal for example
@debodatta739811 ай бұрын
In America the rate is 49%, 49% of american women are unemployed. Also Indias rate varies heavily by state with the North Indian Hindi states of UP/Bihar/Haryana/Chandigarh all dragging the number down immensely with over 85% of women being unemployed.
@avinashtyagi211 ай бұрын
@debodatta7398 key is India needs to increase its manufacturing and make streets safer for women
@ruin911 ай бұрын
What a great and informative video . No beating around the bush no ugly racism just straight up facts . Thankyou ❤
@saurabhade107911 ай бұрын
Just a typical neo liberal, western supramist point of view of analysing.
@Posidon094 ай бұрын
@@saurabhade1079just because we are part of the western world don't make us liberals. I'm a American yet I dislike our liberal policies like LGBTQ. I am more conservative. Wishing for us to be strong in manufacturing and services. They both have huge advantages.
@chinmaysharma942411 ай бұрын
The fact about Manufacturing is very important. Service sector jobs are less in no. And require specialized skills and background that a company can give training for but you need to have some technical background. The thing is majority of people cannot afford such means to learn technical skills which they could've done if the government focused on Manufacturing.
@Eltener12311 ай бұрын
Imo one of the biggest issues is a lack of willingness by many Indians to even acknowledge the cultural, structural and societal issues in their country. Talk to the average Indian and they'll tell you that the country is amazing, the best in every way, the sexism and sectarian problems don't exist, the weirdly small manufacturing base can be ignored and corruption in government is okay. The average Indian tells you that it's okay that so many of the country are still in poverty since a select few have become billionaires and the government spent hundreds of millions of dollars on a statue.
@thelakeman253811 ай бұрын
Sab changa si !
@KoalaG88811 ай бұрын
It's Dunning Kruger syndrome. Average IQ in India is 76. lower than even Papua New Guinea
@amanarya491511 ай бұрын
Damn you analysed it way too correctly,we have this mentality here " kaam chalau " ,it's basically as long it's working it's fine ,doesn't matter the efficiency,and trust me it's not good
@jarjarbinks319311 ай бұрын
It is all based on a thing called "statistics". Just "headlines" don't define things like "sexism" and "sectarian" problems in a country. In spite of its massive population, crushing population density, poverty, and diversity (from religious to linguistic to ethnic), there is simply no other country with the relativity stability of India! Yes, this includes even crimes. All the while being open and democratic. In comparison, even countries with a lot less population and a lot more homogenous have far more acrimonious sectarian divides. Not to mention being far less open and a lot more authoritarian. Most of the Middle Eastern countries fall in this category.
@peak_91111 ай бұрын
Dude you were totally sounding like a foreigner, until i read the 'statue' line.
@oscarharrison799511 ай бұрын
never knew I was an Indian women
@The-goat-king15011 ай бұрын
😂😂
@houseplant101611 ай бұрын
Lmfao, you win
@mtarkes11 ай бұрын
Now go look pretty in a saree.
@enoyna100111 ай бұрын
Show bobs and vegana
@The_DASHER8 ай бұрын
Damn it
@abhishekpowar273311 ай бұрын
I'm in awe of the accuracy and depth of this video. Most of the points that you talked about, be it women being held back from working due to social pressure and unsafe work environments, or the fact that most uneducated people that were displaced out of the agriculture sector have resorted to working in harsh and low-paying construction jobs, or the fact that because India skipped the manufacturing phase, there is a massive influx of job-seekers in a limited number of decent-paying employment opportunities, and several other points that you make in this video, is something I see every day with my own eyes, just not in the context and perspective that you presented them in. Wow! Thank you for making this video.
@PHlophe11 ай бұрын
Abhishek power, great analysis there Sir . The manufacturing technology is the the only thing that made China filthy rich and that India and most of the african continent needs . its a shame that local complexities are so toxic that it'd be hard to progressively implement it.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
The biggest reason for this in my opinion is that men in India don't cook at all and if your salary is low which majority of Indians have you can't order food daily from the restaurants because its too expensive and not healthy, you cant also hire a cook because it is too expensive for middle income family. Men don't wash cloths, iron them, dont clean the house etc. If thier wife if also working a 9 to 5 job then its too much load on her and then on top of that preganancy and child care problems for them. Its basically impossible for the women of the middle income family to work a low paying job do all that so they just stay at home and does the house work. It takes Rs 6000 for a cook 5k for a maid for cleaning and washing cloths/dishes and atleast 10k for childcare(probably more per month), in Delhi average expense for a family of 3 is almost Rs 40,000 to live a decent life with no saving so adding cook and childcare would make it Rs60,000 plus you need to save for healthcare and future education marriages of child and your old age retirement so you need atleast Rs100,000 to sustain this type of lifestyle where women can work, divide it by 2 and you get Rs50,000(6,00,00 per annum) for husband and wife to earn. Just by the income tax data just 2.24 crore people paid income tax in 2022-23, which works out to just about 1.6 per cent of the total population in India. so basically 90% of the population can't afford this type of lifestyle and so WOMEN DONT WORK AND TAKE CARE OF THE HOME.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
@ibisarenotbinchickens9846 that does not contribute to econony
@EmperorofChinaItwillgrowlarger11 ай бұрын
@ibisarenotbinchickens9846Just because a woman earn less doesn’t mean the women have less. If you can’t fit that into your skull, you really need to educate yourself on basic logic.
@vsmk874711 ай бұрын
A big reason in rural areas is probably that there's few opportunity other than hard labour which even the rural families want to stop their women from doing and they actually stop them from working if a man gets a job in the city. As those labour jobs are low pay and very arduous. It's a sign of wealth for poor family of you women are no longer forced to work anymore to earn for food
@thomasgrabkowski828311 ай бұрын
Yep and when women get married, it's also a cultural expectation in India for women to stay home and be housewives
@MdZeeshanAnsari1Ай бұрын
@@thomasgrabkowski8283nah women are incompetent and lazy in reality and have no practical knowledge of skills but only paper degrees
@ArandomIndian30Ай бұрын
We are a socially regressive nation. Plus the safety of women is a concern here.
@TheOneWhoKnocks96911 ай бұрын
What india expected to have: youth = time = money What india actually doing: time pass = money wasted
@DavidLimofLimReport11 ай бұрын
That Simpsons episode in India was accurate then about those laws on big companies with over ten employees! No wonder Mr Burns moved the nuclear power plant back to Springfield.
@stevensibbet586910 ай бұрын
Indians are always are telling me that India is Number One. But the more I find out about India and the more contact Ihave with indians the lower my opinion has become.
@The_DASHER8 ай бұрын
Well thats because of hyper nationalism.History has proven time and time again whenever a leader can't do their job they just rely on nationalism
@Fight-nation-v7q11 ай бұрын
This video has somewhat lit a spark in me. Next year i am starting my college. I want to work on the solution which already exists and find new ways also on this situation
@rohitpaul80511 ай бұрын
Good luck mate
@apnabini11 ай бұрын
A meticulously research work done with spot on facts and rationale behind them. All points mentioned are valid and genuine.
@Nix_10111 ай бұрын
I'm an Indian woman who was raised there for the first 27 years of my life. Moved abroad after being mistreated in the workforce over and over. In my five years of working in India I have faced everything from sexual harassment (which was not looked into despite raising multiple complaints), being paid less than my male friends (one of whom was a college dropout while I had a bachelor's degree), not being taken seriously when asked for leave, being told that I will "get married and quit anyway", not being given the same respect and basic privileges that my male colleagues recieved. Most of the women I know who work are working towards the goal of leaving the country for better and more gainful employment opportunities. After moving abroad, I am finally being paid according to my talent and merit rather than my gender or marital status. And this is the perspective of someone who only worked white collar jobs in India. I cannot even fathom the plight of women in blue collar industries.
@somakchatterjee642910 ай бұрын
You are talking about westernized women.
@Nix_10110 ай бұрын
@@somakchatterjee6429 I am talking from the perspective of a white collar worker, not a "Westernized woman".
@dancingcar89749 ай бұрын
@@Nix_101stop talking bulls&&t
@blazer95479 ай бұрын
You've made it , more power to you 🎉.
@MdZeeshanAnsari1Ай бұрын
@@blazer9547no power
@TheOneWhoKnocks96911 ай бұрын
As an Indian I'm kind of CEO myself
@dongshengdi77311 ай бұрын
No problem. I want to marry Indian women, give them $500 a month allowance
@sriharshacv776011 ай бұрын
:) lol. Nice one.
@paysmenot262411 ай бұрын
@@dongshengdi773if you lived in india you won't be earning 500 dollars a month. If you live in a rich one then you gotta provide 2500 min.
@sagarmahobia515911 ай бұрын
I ve been following this channel for 5 years. I was surprised to see video about India.
@PHlophe11 ай бұрын
Sagar, makes you happy doesn't it.
@pocketReviews11 ай бұрын
This is really Sad😔. I still remember when my mother wanted to do a job but my grandfather objected to it and my father had to move to a different city.
@EmperorofChinaItwillgrowlarger11 ай бұрын
Good for your grandfather.
@saurabhkakkar82584 ай бұрын
Man your analysis is spot on...100% correct.
@deepakkr11 ай бұрын
This is amazingly well done. The ground reality hits hard and you have given proper explanation. It kind of motivated me to grind a bit more so that I can help my fellow Indians.
@Praisethesunson11 ай бұрын
Unionize and organize. That's the only way to actually help your fellow Indians. Unless you mean you want to help the Ambani family buy more stuff. In which case yeah, grind harder.
@deepakkr11 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunson I will take the positives from this comment
@jarjarbinks319311 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunson Apparently you didn't watch the video. Most Indians are employed in very small companies, where there isn't much scope to unionize. India's problem is NOT Ambanis (or other big companies), who in spite of their big organizations have a tiny sliver of the overall pie.
@Praisethesunson11 ай бұрын
@@jarjarbinks3193 Reliance industries owns 7% of India's entire GDP. You are a poor so of course you wouldn't know that. The informal sector isn't a bunch of small businesses. The manual scavengers could unionize. But they would be murdered if they tried. This video is garbage and paints a ridiculous view of India's problems over economic output. Watching this video one would think child labor doesn't exist in India. Or the caste system.
@paysmenot262411 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunsonunionizing works against business's interest of low wages , exploitative work. It's the very reason why developed countries outsource whenever possible , to lower the cost and deal with as less humans as possible. Sucks to be average joe. Think of productivity difference between gov and private employees. They get paid 1/3 of secured jobs , provide more to businesses and economy.
@iam_joshua_bcxvii11 ай бұрын
Much like India, the philippines is a service oriented economy too with a median age roughly the same too at 27-28 afaicr. The only difference being is that in the philippines there is no stigma against women working. I do hope our country could also be strong in the manufacturing side though since at best, vietnam has already surpassed us on that side maybe at least a decade ago or more due to the prohibitive government policies detering foreign investments here
@ravinakuwar140711 ай бұрын
This video doesn't account the fact that cost of living is very low in India. That's why it doesn't required much to sustain a family of 4. An income of 800 dollars is enough to have middle class living in India.
@CommandantNOVA11 ай бұрын
You can't be globally competitive with that salary though
@paysmenot262411 ай бұрын
That's almost 7.5 lpa. It's upper middle class in most cities barring some super expensive ones.
@ravinakuwar140711 ай бұрын
@@CommandantNOVA you are quite Mistaken.
@MarketsDriveTheWorld6 ай бұрын
🤔 Maybe I should move to India then....
@infinixgaming17914 ай бұрын
@@MarketsDriveTheWorld Yes you should. Earning and Saving in USD/ EURO and moving to cheaper countries with weaker currency is very common and well known.
@metalbob12311 ай бұрын
You should make india actually on nebula
@theevil884411 ай бұрын
But much Indians can't afford nebula subscription
@MLGDatBoi11 ай бұрын
fr India's so massive its like its own world
@abitofascientist11 ай бұрын
no one from india would watch it + audiences around the world have very less interest in india than china. and unlike china where every problem might have different answers, in india it is usually societal norms.
@The_DASHER8 ай бұрын
@@abitofascientist That's not true social norms are the root but that doesn't mean they cause all the problems.Another major one is what I call the ""meh who cares approach to the problem"" .I can literally do a speeding and find corruption happening somewhere in less than a minute
@dramani10011 ай бұрын
I am surprised by the depth of research & analysis this video has on indian job market its really impressive ❤
@randommedia344111 ай бұрын
As an indian i can say it's almost true, but its changing, new generation women's are working and productive, while the 19's womens are still just a house wife.. Mostly they choose to became house wife for take care of family and children... Now things are changed a lot...
@vedant613811 ай бұрын
as an Indian studying in a western country, I'm scared to return home after graduating :(
@tauhidshaikh430411 ай бұрын
Why
@blazer95479 ай бұрын
You should return , you have comparative advantage
@piyushpati73198 ай бұрын
Don't. You've escaped the Matrix
@Nas122238 ай бұрын
lol@@piyushpati7319
@Posidon094 ай бұрын
Go to America. On the Internet people say it's bad but that's because people don't like the USA and blows the problems out of proportion without looking deep. Like our supposed gun problem which is ironic when you consider the states that have more gun laws have higher amounts of crime than in states with less gun restrictions. Or that we are all fat which is a flat out lie. Sure we have a higher obesity rate but it's not nearly as high as most believe it is.
@rayfleming205311 ай бұрын
This is one reason why India won't experience China's growth. India will also never receive the amount of foreign investment that China did. ASEAN will collectively have more employed workers and a higher GDP than India for the rest of the century. But by 2050 ASEAN and India will have more employed workers than China. China's workforce started declining in 2012 and has already fallen by 50 million and is losing 10 million or more workers each year as their 1960s post famine baby boomers retire.
@GrassyHills20211 ай бұрын
this isn't even an Indian problem , neighboring countries like Pakistan also have this problem but it has steadily decreased with more women getting educated . Even still in more conservative areas this isn't necessarily the case ,though the cities ''seem'' to have a steady decrease in this issue.
@satviklodha521911 ай бұрын
A really well researched and well documented video. Well done man!
@amandacollyer64511 ай бұрын
This segment is really about how college educated young people can’t find jobs despite strong GDP growth. I had no idea it was so bad.
@abhinav0511 ай бұрын
@@amandacollyer645 gdp growth is mainly due to the upskillment of it professionals, people around me have been getting 20% increment each year for 3-4 years
@rudrakshrai463711 ай бұрын
Wages are not high enough in India. I know a woman who earns the same amount as she pays a nanny/babysitter to look after her kids. Why not look after baby yourselves?
@PHlophe11 ай бұрын
Sounds like the Uk to me , 3/4 of the wages go to the childminder . we are essentially collecting years of employment just to secure er.. retirement. But you guys have all these Aunties and Grannies.
@jasongracesonofzeus11 ай бұрын
Also, on a cultural level, India has not bought into the need for a two-income household. The man is still seen as the primary income source - evident from the way alimony laws are setup, and the woman as a primary care-giver for the children, evident in the way the custody laws are setup. The idea of requiring both the individuals in a marriage to work to support a family is the result of companies massively undercutting worker wages and salaries due to the large population of available labour. This in turn forced women to enter the job markets to increase the chances of earning a better income for the family, but caused a cycle of even more available labour in the market which companies can exploit by paying less on average as now the supply of labour is much higher than the available job opportunities. The problem is not why 75% of women are unemployed, but rather why we as a society, both in the west and in countries like India - have moved from being able to have families flourish with 1 employed individual to requiring 2 or even more. In the name of efficiency in production, economic growth and free markets, the quality of human life suffers.
@ginwilliams420211 ай бұрын
Jason, your well-informed response is a breath of fresh air when compared to this dog doodoo of a video. If only every Westerner was willing to take the time and effort required to research the reality of India instead of blindly trusting whatever propaganda nonsense is shoved down their ignorant throats by an equally ignorant mainstream media.
@ABBZ12011 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing, if a household is able to get by on 1 income - surely that’s not the worst thing considering many people in western countries long for the days when that was possible. In terms of society and family life, having someone at home to raise kids is hugely beneficial for the kids and has been the standard for most of human history, the main ones to benefit from the 2 income household are are huge corporations that are able to massively increase supply of labour while essentially getting away with paying them less forcing couples to both work in order to survive
@davidk.d.759111 ай бұрын
@@ABBZ120the problem is that most households struggle to get by on one income. The reason why they do is because there aren't enough jobs for women. That's the whole point of the video
@russellpengilley592411 ай бұрын
It's worth noting that if you go back a few hundred years to a predominantly rural setting then both parents working would be normal. Certain tasks might be gender specific, but ladies working the fields and crafting was the norm and still is the norm in many places. The ability of an average household to have a modern life with all conveniences and only one person in formal employment was a relatively short period in human history. It does seem like a very pleasant idea though and something we might aspire to, or at least have as a realistic option. Limit mortgages to single income only to pull the value of residential land down?
@GreenGorgeousness11 ай бұрын
@@ABBZ120it actually hasn't been the standard for most of history. In Africa women worked, got the water from miles away, etc. working with plants is very hard. Brazil/South America had women doing their own major tasks as well. You had kids at the tree, picked them up, and then kept working.
@sahulianhooligan70468 ай бұрын
Unemployed women equals healthy birthrate replacement. Employed/collegue educated women equals low birthrate replacement. Its a catch 22
@sodalimesalt8 ай бұрын
As a properly employed and working Indian woman, didn’t know how rare I was🤣😂 Didn’t watch the full vid, but from personal experience, it’s straight up discrimination and exploitation from all sides and lack of any real protection, legal or otherwise.
@krishnkant947711 ай бұрын
3 out of 4 women are unemployed in India on paper but this isn't as black and white as it seems to be. There are various aspects of it most importantly culture. Indian society is extremely conservative, much more conservative that Western conservatism. Women working outside when men are already working and bringing money isn't considered something to be proud of in most Indian families. Most Indian women however do get equal education just like boys but most of them work only when they are unmarried and after marriage they are supposed to be housewives rather than working women. In India, the poorest women are working and employed because their husbands alone can't feed their entire families. The middle class and lower middle class families are prosperous enough to sustain themselves without the income of female members and they are socially most conservative, so they restrict their women from working. The upper middle class and rich families again have more female members working because they are also socially liberal. In my own case my mother was a teacher before marriage, left the job after marriage and my birth and after 10 years again started working as a teacher in government school as I and my sister weren't small enough to be looked after by her. The economic mobility of Indian women is thus mostly constrained by societal expectations, post marriage household chores and taking care of children.
@bloodwargaming366211 ай бұрын
@@user-op8fg3ny3jwhy are you typing bs in every comment?
@brandon890011 ай бұрын
They are "conservative" aka view women as non-equal.
@krishnkant947711 ай бұрын
@@brandon8900Under modern view of gender equality, you are absolutely right. I view this in the same way. However I'm not justifying anything in my comment, I'm simply explaining why employment of women in India is so low.
@BruceWayne-qe7bs11 ай бұрын
@@brandon8900 May be, but that is not the narrative. Many women also don't work because they don't want to work. Their is not enough jobs for women.
@testacals11 ай бұрын
@@user-op8fg3ny3j It's not healthy for the woman. Whether it leads to a better families is also debatable. If this system was super perfect, then india would have zero problems. Ideally both parents should work but the family should be able to be maintained by one income.
@RajeevKumar-wl6ei11 ай бұрын
Many structural issues still persist. We need to have a serious conversation about the public sector economy aka socialism. 70% of the industrial output of India is still government owned. This is a big red flag - these companies aren't producing the kind of growth that matches with international level quality at the same economies of scale. This means that the salaries that are paid to PSU employees is basically funded by the private sector taxpayer base.
@aditidump8 ай бұрын
Never thought of it this way, great analysis
@AugustSeria6 күн бұрын
India not beating the allegations anytime soon 😂
@Youbeentagged9 ай бұрын
To all the Indians in the comments section, who think they're limited in India, Come to Africa. I live in Kenya. I've been living here my whole life. You'll really be valued here.
@Akash-jo6oo11 ай бұрын
I truly feel majority of people who give government exam give it and waste 5-8 years because of lack of factory jobs. It also less shameful for lower middle class to do factory jobs than upper middle. India is a shame based society. So, if my father is SHO in Delhi and my sister studied in IIT Madras, I am also obliged to stand up to very high expectations. Torture is really high for upper class Indians than lower middle class due to shame. So, I hope more manufacturing jobs come in India as competing for the best job is a bitch. I know i will clear it but it is mentally exhausting.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
Yes my friend this is the sad story of India, in my family all my siblings and cousins have good jobs and are considered in upper middle class category but I being bad in social skills and intellectual skills I am forced to work at a low paying job. I can't even find a bride because of that because the difference in economic status.
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
@thezoldics7648 first of all I am educated and live in a city so I want an educated wife and that has lived in a city and no educated women will want to marry someone with low salaried guy, second low income status people generally marry in eary 20's for them 30's is too old for them which I am in, thirdly their is no medium where I can contact them like they are not in matrimonial sites or newspaper, they generally marry amongst their close circle. I got a ristha from my relatives when the talks went further they asked why the future groom is earning so low and it got cancelled. I also have no property to show them.
@paysmenot262411 ай бұрын
@thezoldics7648won't work in his case. If everyone in his family is doing well and he isn't then his wife will also have endure torture/insult from in laws family. Nobody would want that.
@girl463211 ай бұрын
India is country tht consider shame at high honor. Could anyone list atleast 50 types of shame without feeling shame. Things in which Indian feel shame. I think there could be even thousands. Could you all try to list those all factors.
@Akash-jo6oo11 ай бұрын
@@girl4632 There are thousands of it but what would be the point of naming them. I could just stop giving a fuck about what my parents think or not but still life is a struggle. It is not as if not preparing for a government exam gives me any alternative. I still need a good job so that I can marry my 6 year old relationship gf. So, India is just place of lack of opportunities even for those who don't care about society that much.
@shbhmk11 ай бұрын
India has realised this i think. There is more focus on manufacturing these days.
@abitofascientist11 ай бұрын
agreed
@Praisethesunson11 ай бұрын
India is a globally top rank manufacturer of pharmaceuticals. You'd never know that watching this video.
@thelakeman253811 ай бұрын
Post-Independence Indian governments have always known that and failed in doing anything about it, Bombay plan published pre-independence talked about expanding industry, most of the five year plans were aimed at increasing manufacturing, even more recent initiatives like make in India largely failed, even PLI has remained very lacklustre so far.
@pranavingale685011 ай бұрын
I really hope the pli scheme does some magic, I know it's not the ultimate solution but still!
@rishavkumar125011 ай бұрын
@@Praisethesunson That's not good, it also doesn't employ many people
@tec430311 ай бұрын
Those videos always make me think "oh what a great place for a company to move to" and then a few minutes later "I really wouldn't want to deal with xy if I had a company there"
@chinguunerdenebadrakh702211 ай бұрын
The title is clickbaity. 75% of Indian women ARE NOT unemployed. They are however not participating in the labor force. To be considered unemployed, you have to be eligible for work (aka adult), not working and actively looking for work. The facts in the video are important and the gov should aim to improve the situation, but unemployment is a specific term in economics and not just a catch all term for people not working.
@itadaku238 ай бұрын
Just discovered this channel. Well, the algorithm did. Good work, added sub.
@metarus20811 ай бұрын
very good analysis ... as an Indian, this helps us to identify more what we need to in terms of Women's upliftment
@ArawnOfAnnwn11 ай бұрын
This isn't really about women's upliftment. This is about decades of failure at making Indian manufacturing a thing.
@metarus20811 ай бұрын
@@ArawnOfAnnwn I agree ... it highlights how we missed becoming a manufacturing hub. even Vietnam, Bangladesh and Malaysia were able to do it despite their smaller population. ItllThat failure was because of our lack of infrastructure like dedicated Freight Corridor and water supply. Also it was bad industrial support laws, restrictive labor laws and corrupt politicians.
@jarnMod11 ай бұрын
Come to think of it, when I went to India for that 1 year test production contract, I couldn't find female secretary which is very weird. I didn't look myself but I hire a dude to do it and he said it's very difficult. I just want business done, with or without Mr.Dickerson, so I didn't press on and get another dude to do the job for that one year. Strange how when you don't question it, such issue can fly under the redar, no matter how close you are.
@ananyanegi942310 ай бұрын
India is not a safe place for women to work.
@BeastHighlightsOfficial11 ай бұрын
So basically, to sum it up, there are two reasons: because India’s government regulations, companies tend to be small in size, leading to fewer jobs for women to occupy; and also because of the quick rise of China and its effects becoming a global economic transformation, India’s manufacturing economical opportunities were largely oppressed and people had no choice but to develop other jobs that aren’t suitable to women.
@pianoforte61111 ай бұрын
A lot of economic growth comes from transitioning small businesses to medium sized business. If hiring a tenth employee is that punishing, then they really need a more gradual transition of regulations to encourage and not discourage growth.
@hardmferАй бұрын
What a shitty world where honor is tied to whatever your daughter is doing. Honor should be tied to how free your daughters are to do what they want or their level of autonomy. If your daughters are not safe, that is bad, but I guess it can be hard to make them safer, though it should be of high priority.
@mainstreet302311 ай бұрын
Perfect!!! Old India, slowly sloughing off the last few centuries. China was shocked into action.
@pulse355411 ай бұрын
huh?? in the last few centuries India was destroyed repeatedly by European colonizers. There's no comparison
@christianweibrecht655511 ай бұрын
would be great to learn how India's huge & rapidly growing diaspora is effecting its economy
@rishavkumar125011 ай бұрын
Well there's two kinds within the diaspora : 1. Migrants in Gulf Monarchies 2. Permanent Residents of Western Countries ( India doesn't allow dual citizenship) Migrants in Gulf monarchies mostly work in blue collar jobs and send back some of their income as remittance which has a direct impact on the economy ... Now permanent resident types can't do much unless they are businessmen and therefore they can invest in any sector of the Indian economy ( most investment is only In tech though for some reason)
@pradeepnaik583411 ай бұрын
As an Indian I want to share some of my observation: Many woman who were in poor/ middle class families do work. Woman in rich families rarely work. Highly educated woman do work irrespective of family background. But in some families some string attached to women where their in laws dont allow them to work which is really outrageous and stupid. But that's what india is... In some backward villages mostly in northern part of india don't even allow women to go out ....
@meghanarora413611 ай бұрын
that 'in laws denying the woman to work' thing happens a lot more than we think. It's disgusting honestly, in laws think that they own their daughter in law now
@anuragchakraborty876611 ай бұрын
@@meghanarora4136 Why do so many Indian women get married instead of setting up their respective careers? Indian women need to stop marrying and start focusing on financial stability.
@pushangill12348 ай бұрын
Nowadays majority upper class women do work as per my surroundings.
@SuperPrem11 ай бұрын
Your Best Video yet. It encapsultated a small brief of almost every issue facing India. If it could be modulated to reach the Indian people at scale that would be phenomenal.
@Visiontech8 ай бұрын
Another great video and thanks sir!!!
@ddeviddyoung11 ай бұрын
Giving it Cultural reasons is really weak point.. It's like saying in a village children are not going to school because parents don't want them to be educated but main problem is there is no school in village in first place.
@goyonman965511 ай бұрын
But cultural reasons are the most important Not all societies need to have "employed" women
@ddeviddyoung11 ай бұрын
@@goyonman9655 but all society needs to and should make as much money as possible.
@goyonman965511 ай бұрын
@@ddeviddyoung I do not believe this at all But you do So that's where we disagree
@AmishKumar-lc7zsАй бұрын
@@ddeviddyoung money isn't everything but stable families are.
every time there is any effort to do anything about labour laws there are massive strikes. Large scale labour unions backed by political parties have done incredible damage to this countries workers. Their goal is never to help workers but rather help their pollical and financial backer gather more votes.
@varniitprofessional11 ай бұрын
Its not unemployment but not working and looking for rich guy to embezzle money. I see most not keen on working and if in company not coming to work by giving excuses leading to work targets delays. Imagine for HR role, there are 5 females and none able to do one work properly and what company top management has to shell out to keep feminism active. But only one man does all work and at even less pay.
@LuckyDuckie1152 ай бұрын
As of Sept 2024, India unemployment for 25 or under is 40%, highest ever
@SilverScarletSpiderКүн бұрын
that is sad 😂
@johnsonrajendran570611 ай бұрын
This was well researched and put together Amazing video ❤❤
@Keylevitation11 ай бұрын
Another fun obstacle to getting a job is that a lot of places require people to give a bribe to even get hired
@pranavingale685010 ай бұрын
In hiring, i don't think there is a bribe, I mean it depends on your skills
@Keylevitation10 ай бұрын
@@pranavingale6850 bribing is a necessity to get an Indian government job
@pranavingale685010 ай бұрын
@@Keylevitation umm......in some cases....yeah.....i mean low level jobs like train tc and all......but not in high level jobs like petroleum engineer in state owned oil company
@hieunguyenrileygekko11 ай бұрын
we often joke about Indian "tech support" (yep, scammers) but it actually shows another fundamental aspect, i mean these people have quite impressive english skill and well educated overall and still desperate enough to take this despicable job
@moritamikamikara387911 ай бұрын
Don't shit on indian tech support. Yeah Indian scammers are a thing, but Indian tech support is real and its good.
@Kalinga_311 ай бұрын
In India, 45% of STEM Education graduates are women. 37% of IT Workers in India are women. This proportions are higher even than many western countries. The lack of market incentives are stronger than 'culture'. India also has the highest proportion of women pilots in the world- which shows that where quality jobs are present, women do have incentives to work.
@user-we8hi4yu611 ай бұрын
please stop searching Tech support no from google
@polaris198511 ай бұрын
Its actually a very high paying job.
@bobSeigar11 ай бұрын
@@moritamikamikara3879No it isn't. It is shit with people who barely comprehend the languages they are attempting to utilize.