Trends in Labour Migration in India (Last Four Decades)
Labour migration in India has undergone significant shifts due to economic reforms, globalization, and demographic changes.
1. Internal Migration Trends
- 1980s-1990s: Rural-to-urban migration was limited, driven by Green Revolution and agriculture-based employment.
- 2000s-Present:
- Rise in Circular Migration: Short-term, seasonal migration (e.g., from Bihar, Odisha to Punjab for agricultural work).
- Shift to Informal Sectors: Increasing migration to construction, textiles, and gig economy jobs.
- Metro-Centric Migration: Migration concentrated towards Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Hyderabad.
- Distress Migration: Driven by agrarian distress, low wages, and climate change impacts (e.g., migration from Bundelkhand due to droughts).
- COVID-19 Impact (2020): Reverse migration witnessed as millions of informal workers returned to villages due to job loss in urban areas.
2. International Migration Trends
- 1980s-1990s:
- Migration dominated by low-skilled workers to Gulf countries (construction, domestic work).
- 2000s-Present:
- Diversification of Destinations: Gulf countries still dominant, but migration to Europe, Canada, and Australia increased.
- Rise of High-Skilled Migration: IT professionals, healthcare workers moving to USA, UK (e.g., H-1B visa dependence).
- Remittance Growth: India became the world’s largest remittance recipient ($111 billion in 2022, World Bank).
- Stringent Visa Norms: Kuwaitization, Nitaqat Law (Saudi Arabia), and US visa restrictions impacted Indian workers.
Conclusion
Labour migration in India has shifted from rural-agricultural to urban-informal sectors internally and from low-skilled Gulf migration to high-skilled Western migration externally. Policy measures like Skill India, E-Shram, and better social security for migrants are needed for sustainable migration management.