Of the 60 million new jobs the ILO says are needed annually across the world, at least a fifth of this need is in South Asia. The latter region, led by India, has been an exception to the depressed economic conditions.
The report attributes it to robust economic growth, thanks mainly to a rise in labour productivity in the five years ending 2009-10, rather than an expansion in employment. It says till the 2000s, labour productivity and employment grew at similar rates. But over the past decade, increased productivity has taken over as a driver of growth in the region.
In India, total employment grew by only 0.1 per cent yearly over the five years till 2009-10, says the report, "from 457.9 million in 2004-05 to 458.4 mn in 2009-10, while labour productivity grew 34 per cent over this period".
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