There are different types of people in the society.
Similarly in our association also. Some are worried about
3.7% IDA. Some are donating even one lakh rupees to help the needy people. Some
are donating their one month pension.
The workers are not in a position to celebrate May Day this
year.
Corona virus has taught Many lessons. Are we going to learn
from this?
Capitalist countries are facing severe crisis. But the
countries having left ideology are comparatively better.
Government hospitals are doing their yeoman service. Even
Spain has to nationalise private hospitals.
People from all walks of life are appreciating the services
of Doctors, health workers, police, small retailers, electricity, water
etc. The government has to rethink its
approach towards privatisation.
Because of nearly 40 days lockdown in India, the most
affected are daily wage earners.
A survey says post-corona situation will be very serious.
There will be a 10 lakhs job loss in Automobile industry alone and 13.6 crore
jobs would be lost. This shall have a cascading effect.
Santosh Mehrotra, a human development economist and
Professor at the centre for Informal sector and labour studies in Jawaharlal
Nehru University said that there were 49.5 crore labour force but in 2017-18
three crore lost jobs. So, it's only
46.5 crore labour force. Out of this, 90.7% are in informal sector.
20.5 crore are in agriculture sector and 26 crore are in
manufacturing, services, non-manufacturing sectors. They are all casual,
contact, daily wage earners. For 13.6
crore workers there is no written contract even.
In Tiruppur 1500 export companies employed six lakh workers
most of them are daily wage earners who got Rs.450/- per day.
Manufacturing sector employs 5.64 crore in India.
In India's manufacturing sector, textiles and apparels
employs 1.8 crore people.
Foot-wear industry in Agra - there are 250 mechanised
factories and 5000 cottage industries there employing 4 lakh workers; half of
them are daily wage earners.
Non-manufacturing sectors like construction, mining,
electricity, water and gas etc. Employs 5.9 crore.
Service sector employs 14.4 crore people out of which 3.7
crore are from Retail Trade.
Micro. Small. Medium Enterprises are very badly hit.
All these sectors including tourism, hotels are very much
affected.
The government of India has simply announced an economic
package of 1.7 lakh crore which is only 0.85% of GDP. This is highly insufficient. Many countries
in the world have announced even upto 16% of GDP as stimulus package.
India can give a stimulus package of 5 to 6% of GDP. There are 26 crore families in India out of
which 50% are very badly in need of government aid. They should be given atleast Rs.5000/- per
month in addition to free supply of ration.
It's not an impossible task but it requires a will rather political
will.
Indian government's debt is only 68% of GDP and many
European countries are having 100% of GDP as debt according to renowned
economist Shri Kaushik Basu.
The government has to help the agriculture sector to lift
their products and offer them remunerative prices that is 50% more than the
production cost as recommended by Swaminathan committee.
The government has to extend necessary help to the MSME
sector which offers maximum employment next to agriculture and earns 32% of GDP
and helps export thereby earning foreign exchange. This is the requirements of
supply side.
To create demand, there should be money in the hands of
large majority of people. Freezing of DA
to government employees and pensioners and arbitrarily cutting wages would
seriously affect the demand side.
The government should be forced not to adopt pro-corporate
policies but to adopt pro-people, pro-labour policies. That pledge is the need of the hour in this
May Day
DG,
Vice President, CHQ,
AIBSNLPWA.
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