As many as 70,000 workers were hit by the sharp fall in merchandise exports as it cost them their jobs in Q2 2015-16, a report stated.
A joint study conducted by Assocham and Thought Arbitrage noted that "sharp decline in merchandise exports mainly contributed to a loss of 70,000 jobs during the second quarter of 2015-16," reinforcing a crucial point that the employment generation has to be led by the domestic demand.
Decrease in livelihood opportunities in export units caused the retrenchment of around 70,000 workers during the said period, the report added.
The textiles sector was most affected witnessing a massive drop in contractual employment as outward shipments shrank, it said.
Besides, slowdown in global demand also compelled some of the units to retrench people from payroll.
"There is a concern because most of the export-oriented units in the economy are dependent on contractual workers. So massive reduction in contractual jobs in these sectors might imply deteriorating conditions in the export units," the report said.
Apart from marginal addition in jobs in the leather sector, as many as seven sectors saw drastic retrenchment in both regular and contractual employment.
The study propagates that Indian economy has to look internally at its domestic scene to restart the growth story, which is only possible if there is extra demand generation within the economy.
India's exports declined for the second consecutive month in August by 0.3 per cent to $21.51 billion due to dip in shipments of products like petroleum and leather.
The outward shipments stood at $21.58 billion in August 2015.
Since December 2014, exports fell for the straight 18th month till May 2016 due to weak global demand and slide in oil prices. Shipments witnessed growth only in June this year only to again enter the negative zone in July.
(With PTI inputs)
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