On the other hand, it is a hard fact that government jobs alone can not ameliorate the situation of employment. It is much difficult to augment the government jobs at the cost of the tax payer’s burden. It can be observed that in 1980 there were 2.59 lakh government jobs and those escalated to 3.75 lakhs in 2011 but again got depleted to 3.26 lakhs in 2013. It is a point to ponder over that even by doubling government jobs, the problem will not be solved. Moreover, this doubling is out of question and next to impossible.
The employment exchanges also presented a different picture. In 1980 there were 4.5 lakh unemployed registered with these offices. That number got depleted to 3.54 lakh in 2011 and further to 3.52 lakh in 2013. It does not mean that large number of people got employed during this period. Actually, the less educated or illiterate form a major portion of the population seeking employment and they do not register themselves with these offices. Even otherwise, many professionals and others do not get themselves registered keeping in view the inability of these offices to generate jobs. The number of applicants for the police jobs proved that the number of registered unemployed in exchanges cannot be taken as the actual number of unemployed.
The desperation of unemployed can be seen in the fact that number of young men have gone abroad for the sake of employment even by selling their land and property. Stories of them being exploited by unscrupulous agents keeps appearing in the papers every day. That is why Punjab is the second state after Kerala whose maximum people are working abroad.
It is also reported that all these applicants had to pay some money for these jobs as application fee and crores of rupees were collected by the government. How far is it justified for the government to charge fees from unemployed people?
In 1977 when Janta Party came to power, it took the matter of unemployment seriously and launched an auspicious employment plan that envisaged to generate 10 million jobs every year to accomplish the goal of 100 million jobs in 5 years, but as the Janta Party government ruled out of power, and the plan got scraped the problem remain anchored in the same position. In 1980 when Congress swept into power, the unemployment problem was again taken as a crucial issue but more stress was laid on generating self- employment through training, credit and subsidy, but the results remained unimpressive.
Punjab is an agricultural state where agriculture is the mainstay of about 50 percent of the population but the contribution of agriculture in the state gross domestic product (SGDP) has decelerated to 28 percent in which 9 percent is contributed by dairy — the main subsidiary occupation with agriculture. It makes vivid the big gap between farm and non-farm income.