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India’s Unemployment Rate Falls in 2025, Salaried Jobs Gain Ground

  • January 1, 2026
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Educated jobseekers see relief, women drive workforce expansion

India’s labour market showed encouraging signs in 2025, with unemployment easing across both rural and urban areas. According to the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS), rural joblessness dipped to 2.4% (from 2.5% a year earlier), while urban unemployment fell to 4.8% (from 5%).

The gains were broad-based:

  • Educated individuals (secondary level and above) saw unemployment decline to 6.5% from 7%.
  • Youth unemployment (ages 15–29) dropped to 9.9%, down from 10.3%.

Participation & Absorption: The Subtle Shift

The Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR) held steady at 59.3%, while the Worker Population Ratio (WPR) remained at 57.4%. This suggests that the improvement wasn’t driven by more people entering the workforce, but by better absorption of those already seeking jobs.

 Rise of Salaried Employment

One of the most notable shifts is the gradual formalisation of India’s workforce:

  • Regular wage and salaried jobs climbed to 23.6%, up from 22.4%.
  • Self-employment continued its decline, falling to 56.2%, extending a steady slide from 58.2% in 2023.

This transition signals a slow but meaningful move toward structured employment, with more Indians securing stable, formal roles.

 Sectoral Transformation

The composition of jobs is evolving:

  • Agriculture’s share in employment is shrinking.
  • Manufacturing is gaining traction.
  • Services continue to expand.

Together, these shifts point to a structural transformation of the economy, with labour moving away from traditional sectors toward higher-value industries.

 Wages & Gender Dynamics

Wages have inched upward, with women recording faster earnings growth across self-employment, salaried roles, and casual work compared to men. While the absolute gender pay gap remains wide, the trend suggests progress toward narrowing disparities.

Challenges That Persist

Despite the positive momentum, hurdles remain:

  • Youth NEET rate (not in employment, education, or training) stands at a worrying 25%.
  • Skill formation is limited, with less than 5% of youth receiving formal vocational or technical training.

These gaps highlight the need for stronger skilling initiatives and targeted policies to ensure India’s demographic dividend translates into sustained growth.

 Final Word

India’s labour market in 2025 reflects cautious optimism: unemployment is easing, salaried jobs are rising, and women are making stronger inroads. Yet, the challenge of skilling and engaging youth remains critical.

“Employment is not just about numbers — it’s about quality, stability, and inclusivity.”

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