How can urbanisation boost skills and create employment?

Independent India may have started out as a country that lived in its villages but today all the evidence suggests that Indians are increasingly shifting to cities. And there is a big reason for this shift: Jobs. Rural India and the farm economy can neither create the millions of jobs that Indian need nor provide the kind of incomes that Indians aspire to earn. Cities, on the other hand, can become bustling centres of not just job creation but also skill development. Yet, as things stand, many cities are struggling to provide employment opportunities for India’s youth.

Lucknow is the capital city of Uttar Pradesh, the state which not only has one of the biggest economies within India but also one where the government is working towards the ambitious target of becoming a trillion dollar economy.

Such a goal will require Uttar Pradesh to more than treble its state GDP over the next five years.

Cities such as Lucknow will play a crucial role if such a transformation has to come about. But what is Lucknow doing to prepare itself for this change? How are other cities in UP going to play their part? Is enough being done for improving the skills of UP’s youth? Where are the gaps in creating new job opportunities and how can the process be improved?

These will be some key questions discussed in the sixth edition of The Indian Express’s THINC: CITIES seminar series, presented by Omidyar Network India, to be held in Lucknow on Thursday.

Festive offer

The seminar will feature a keynote address by Amrit Abhijat, Principal Secretary, Urban Development Department, Government of Uttar Pradesh. It will be followed by a panel discussion that will feature Bornali Bhandari (Professor, National Council of Applied Economic Research), Geeta Thatra (Associate Director, Research and Training, Work Fair and Free), Paramjeet Chawla (Program Manager and Urban Economist, WRI India) and Smita Agarwal (Chairperson CII Uttar Pradesh).

The seminar will be moderated by Udit Misra, Associate Editor, The Indian Express.



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