According to the Factories Act 1948, manufacturing units, which employ less than 10 workers if functioning with the aid of power or less than 20 workers when functioning without the aid of power fall within the informal or unorganised sector. According to the
Applying the NSSO’s definition, its latest EUS estimated that the informal sector accounted for 75% of usual employment and 69% of employment in urban areas. The non-agriculture and AGEGC sectors alone represented 41% and 95% of total employment in the country.
Manufacturing, construction and trade (wholesale and retail) that account for a dominant share of informal sector employment represented 76% and 68% of all workers in the informal non-agriculture sector, in the rural and urban areas, respectively.
If the definition of the organised sector is changed to include all units that employ 20 workers or more, then the unorganised sector accounted for 83% of workers in the public sector and 92% in the private sector.
These figures may actually look ever larger considering most surveys have left out construction, an area that accounts for a significant share of income and employment in the economy and instead focused on parts of the organised sector such as manufacturing, trade and other services.
This clearly implies that an overwhelming share of employment in the country is in the informal sector and that the mammoth informal economy, that is yet to be studied and assesses properly, accounts for a major chunk of production and services that contribute to the country’s GDP. What this means is that if one were to include a realistic picture of the contribution of the informal economy, then the size of India’s GDP and broader economy would be much bigger that what is perceived to be the case now.
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