A survey by Deloitte Touche
Tohmatsu India LLP showed average salaries gained 3.6 per cent in the fiscal
year that started in April, down from 8.6 per cent a year ago.
Joblessness may be
easing in India as the economy gradually reopens from the world’s biggest
lockdown, but wage growth remains subdued -- dashing hopes of a recovery in the
consumption-driven economy.
A survey by Deloitte
Touche Tohmatsu India LLP showed average salaries gained 3.6 per cent in
the fiscal year that started in April, down from 8.6 per cent a year ago. Only
23 per cent of the companies surveyed said they planned to offer hikes next
year.
Wage bills of
companies increased by just 2.9 per cent in the three months to June from a
year ago -- the slowest growth in 18 years, according to a separate analysis of
1,560 listed companies by Mumbai-based private research firm Centre for
Monitoring Indian Economy Pvt.
“If you look at
the manufacturing sector, wages declined by 7 per cent. So that’s a deep gash,”
Mahesh Vyas, managing director of CMIE, said by phone. He doesn’t see wage
growth going back to pre-Covid levels in the “foreseeable future” as “the
economy is facing a serious problem of contraction of income.”
CMIE estimates the
jobless rate fell to 7.4 per cent in July from a record 23.5 per cent in April,
the height of coronavirus-related curbs. Slowing wage growth risks squeezing
private spending in Asia’s third-largest economy, where consumption accounts
for about 60 per cent of gross domestic product. India’s GDP will shrink 4.5
per cent this year as a result of the pandemic, according to the International
Monetary Fund.
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