Gujarat Likely To Suffer Huge Losses As Most Of The Industries Depend On Migrant Labourers
Migrants make up about 70% of Surat&rsquos workforce and 50% of Ahmedabad higher than most of the major cities of India. Punjab and Gujarat have harboured fewer anti-migrant sentiments as they themselves are known to be migrating across the globe extensively. Mumbai and Assam have been the other hotbeds of anti- migrant rhetoric and sentiment.
As the issue of migration is raging on following the recent attacks on labourers from north Indian states, the experts point out that a population of over five lakh from different states forms the basis of industrial units in ¡®Vibrant Gujarat.¡¯
Chinmay Tumbe, assistant professor of economics area at IIM-Ahmedabad, said that migrants make up about 70% of Surat¡¯s workforce and 50% of Ahmedabad, higher than most of the major cities of India.
AP
While for other cities of Gujarat the number is less, it is still substantial, he added. Tumbe¡¯s book ¡®India Moving: The History of Migration¡¯ was published earlier this year.
¡°The major genesis is the Mulki-non Mulki conflict observed in Nizam-ruled Hyderabad in the 19th century with impacts lingering till the formation of Telangana state. Mumbai and Assam have been the other hotbeds of anti-migrant rhetoric and sentiment. But in most parts of India, it has not reared its ugly head in open confrontation,¡± he said, adding that friction can also be expressed in terms of delayed wage payments or provision of fewer social security benefits.
BCCL
Tumbe said that historically Punjab and Gujarat have harboured fewer anti-migrant sentiments as they themselves are known to be migrating across the globe extensively. ¡°The current anti-migrant hysteria will hopefully be short-lived,¡± he said.
Migrant workers who have a choice to migrate between Gujarat and Kerala prefer the latter because of better labour benefits. ¡°Migrant friendly labour policies should be a priority for Gujarati enterprises to attract the best labour talent in the country that would enhance the firms¡¯ performance,¡± said Tumbe.