India’s Demographic Dividend as a Time Bomb
Context
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India has 800+ million youth (<35 years) → one of the largest in the world.
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Demographic dividend ≠ automatic benefit → risk of turning into a demographic liability.
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Quote: Rabindranath Tagore – “Don’t limit a child to your own learning, for she was born in another time.” → highlights outdated education system.
Challenges
a) Skills Gap & Employability Crisis
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40–50% of engineering graduates not placed in jobs (last decade).
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Graduate Skills Index 2025 (Mercer-Mettl): only 43% job-ready.
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India Skills Report 2024: 65% of high school graduates pursue degrees misaligned with aptitude/market demand.
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Employers report increasing difficulty in finding skilled talent.
b) Outdated Education System
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Curriculum revision cycle – every 3 years → too slow vs AI-driven change.
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Exam-centric, rote-learning based; limited focus on career readiness, problem-solving, practical training.
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EdTech platforms (Coursera, Udemy, etc.) → commoditised certificates, limited impact.
c) AI & Future of Work
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McKinsey: 70% of Indian jobs at automation risk by 2030.
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WEF: AI + new tech will create 170 million jobs by 2030, but 92 million displaced.
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Up-skilling, cross-skilling, re-skilling → critical.
d) Career Awareness Deficit
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Mindler Survey (2022):
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93% of students (Class 8–12) know only 7 career options (doctor, engineer, lawyer, teacher etc.).
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Only 7% students received career guidance.
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Modern economy offers 20,000+ career paths, but awareness missing.
Government Response
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Skill India Mission (2015): target 400 million by 2022 → fell short.
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Other schemes:
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PMKVY (Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana)
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PMKK (Kaushal Kendras)
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JSS (Jan Shikshan Sansthan)
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PM-YUVA Yojana
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SANKALP (Skills Acquisition & Knowledge Awareness for Livelihood Promotion)
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PM’s Internship Scheme
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Issue: Fragmentation, poor alignment with industry demand.
Risks
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Rising educated unemployment → social unrest.
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Example: Mandal Commission protests (1990s) – youth-led civil disobedience turned violent.
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Risk of creating literate but unemployable generation = “ticking time bomb”.
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Lant Pritchett (World Bank): “Where Has All the Education Gone?” → paradox of education without employability.
Way Forward
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Curriculum reforms – integrate AI, emerging careers, soft skills.
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National skilling strategy aligned with industry demand.
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Career counselling in schools (mandatory career readiness frameworks).
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Stronger academia–industry–government partnerships.
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Promote EdTech for skills & discovery (beyond rote/test-prep).
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Upskilling & re-skilling workforce (lifelong learning).
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Make Skill India & allied schemes cohesive, outcome-driven, not fragmented.





