Skill Development in India – Challenges & Initiatives – Explained Pointwise

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India is at a pivotal demographic moment. With one of the youngest workforces in the world, the country has significant potential for higher productivity and growing consumer demand. Focusing on the potential of young population and realising the importance of skilling ecosystem, the Union Budget 2026–27 positions skill development as a cross-sectoral priority.
Over the last decade, India has built one of the largest skilling ecosystems in the world. Between 2015 & 2025, India’s flagship skilling programme, PM Kaushal Vikas Yojana, has trained & certified around 1.4cr candidates, Still, the employability outcomes remains uneven, and PLFS data show that wage gains from vocational training are modest & inconsistent, particularly in informal employment, where most workers are absorbed, offering limited recognition for certified skills & very less visible improvement in quality of life.

Skill development in India

Table of Content
What are the challenges or limitations in India’s skill development programme?
What are the various initiatives for skill development of the labour force in India?
What can be the way forward to improve skill development in India?

What is Skill Development?

  • Skill development and upskilling play a pivotal role in enhancing the livelihoods of individuals and, by extension, the welfare of communities.
  • This aspect of sustainable development is particularly crucial in rapidly developing economies like India, where a significant portion of the population still grapples with challenges such as unemployment and underemployment.
Skill development in India
Source: Sambhav Foundation

What is the importance of skill development?

  1. Enhancing Employability and Economic Independence: Comprehensive skill development directly impacts employability. By equipping individuals with relevant, marketable skills, opens doors to new job opportunities and career paths. A report by the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) highlights that skill training increases the likelihood of employment by 15% to 25%. This rise in employability naturally translates into economic independence and improved living standards, crucial for individual and familial well-being.
  2. Empowerment and Social Inclusion: Skill development initiatives often target marginalised groups, including women and rural populations, thereby fostering social inclusion and empowerment. For instance, UNESCO’s data indicates that vocational training programs have significantly increased women’s participation in the workforce in developing countries, leading to their empowerment and, consequently, the upliftment of entire communities.
  3. Fueling Economic Growth and Innovation: A skilled workforce is the backbone of innovation and economic growth. According to a study by the World Economic Forum, economies that invest in their human capital tend to have higher growth rates. Skilled individuals contribute more effectively to the workforce, leading to increased productivity, which is a key driver of economic growth.
  4. Contributing to Societal Advancement: Skill development contributes to reducing poverty levels, as skilled individuals are more likely to secure better-paying jobs. The International Labour Organization (ILO) underscores this, stating that education and training are key determinants in breaking the cycle of poverty. Skilled populations are better positioned to contribute to their communities, not just economically but also in terms of social and civic engagement. This leads to healthier, more cohesive, and progressive societies.

What are the challenges or limitations in India’s skill development programme?

  1. Employability Gap: The employability gap remains a major hurdle. Even though more youth are “certified,” they are not necessarily “job-ready.” According to the India Skills Report 2025, only about 54.8% of Indian graduates are considered employable. Many training programs still focus on outdated curricula that don’t reflect current industry needs in AI, robotics, or the green economy.
  2. Low Placement Rates: PMKVY 1.0, 2.0 and 3.0 had placement rates of roughly 18-23%, dropping to about 10% in PMKVY 3.0, indicating limited translation of training into jobs.
  3. Misalignment with Market Demand (“Skill Mismatch”): There is a persistent disconnect between the skills taught and the jobs available. While national policy identified sectors like construction and logistics as having over 60% of future demand, PMKVY allocated only 22.7% of training to these areas. Conversely, the apparel sector alone received 28.4% of certifications, despite not being a top-priority area and actually seeing a decline in employment. This supply-demand mismatch means candidates are trained for roles where few jobs exist.
  4. Limited Industry Participation: For a skill programme to succeed, the “end-user” (the employer) must be involved in the design. But in India, only about 5% of enterprises participate in formal skill development programs.
  5. Lack of “Skin in the Game”: Many employers do not recognize government certifications, preferring their own internal training or private certifications (like those from Google or AWS) which they find more rigorous.
  6. Weak Apprenticeships: While the National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS) has grown, it still accounts for a tiny fraction of the total workforce compared to countries like Germany.
  7. Failure of Sector Skill Councils (SSCs): SSCs were created to act as industry-facing institutions that define standards, ensure relevance, and anchor employability. SSCs have not only failed to fulfill its mandate but have largely limited themselves to standard creation.
  8. Social Perception: Only about 4.1% of India’s workforce has received formal vocational training, a stark contrast to countries like South Korea (96%) or Germany (75%) because traditional degrees are still seen as the only path to social mobility. Vocational courses are often viewed as a “last resort” for those who fail in mainstream academics.
  9. Rural Disconnect: While 7.1% of urban youth receive formal training, the figure drops to just 3.9% in rural areas. Training centers are often clustered in urban hubs, leaving rural youth to deal with long travel times and high opportunity costs. Advanced training in AI and data analytics is largely concentrated in Tier-1 metros.
  10. Gender Barriers: While female employability (54%) has actually surpassed male employability in some sectors, women remain underrepresented in high-end STEM and AI-intensive roles due to mobility constraints and socio-cultural barriers. Women face additional hurdles including limited mobility, lack of childcare at centers, and societal restrictions, leading to lower participation in high-growth technical trades.
  11. Fragmented Ecosystem: The entire skill development ecosystem in India is fragmented: training is delivered by one entity, assessment by another, certification by SSCs, and placement by someone else. This fragmentation has eroded trust & diffuses the responsibility without consequences.

What are the various initiatives for skill development of the labour force in India?

Skill India Mission
  • Skill India Mission (SIM), launched in 2015, provides skill, re-skill, and up-skill training through an extensive network of skill development centres under major schemes.
  • The mission focuses on all sections of the society across the country, and concentrate on enhancing the skills and employability of the working age population.
  • Under this mission, following schemes are covered:
    1. Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY)
    2. Jan Shikshan Sansthan (JSS),
    3. National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (NAPS),
    4. Craftsman Training Scheme (CTS) in Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs)

Skill development in India
Source: PIB
Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana 4.0 (PMKVY 4.0)
  • Provides short-term training, reskilling, and upskilling.
  • Introduces 400+ new courses in emerging technologies, including AI, 5G, cybersecurity, green hydrogen, and drone technology.
  • Promotes on-the-job training and recognition of prior learning to equip workers with globally recognized skills.
  • Aligns with other government initiatives such as PM Vishwakarma, PM Surya Ghar Muft Bijli Yojana, National Green Hydrogen Mission, and NAL JAL Mitra, enabling cross-sector skill impact.
  • Target Beneficiaries: Individuals aged 15–59 years.
Pradhan Mantri National Apprenticeship Promotion Scheme (PM-NAPS)
  • Aims to expand apprenticeship training across industries.
  • Provides 25% of the stipend (up to Rs. 1,500 per apprentice per month) through Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT).
  • Expands apprenticeship opportunities in AI, robotics, blockchain, green energy, and Industry 4.0.
  • Focuses on small establishments, MSMEs, aspirational districts, and the North-East Region.
  • Target Beneficiaries: Individuals aged 14-35 years.
Sector Skill Councils (SSCs)
  • SSCs are industry-led, autonomous bodies that act as the primary link between the government’s skilling policy and the actual requirements of the workforce.
  • They were established under the National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC) to ensure that training isn’t just happening in a vacuum but is directly aligned with what employers actually need.
  • Core functions:
    1. Setting Standards: They create National Occupational Standards (NOS) and Qualification Packs (QP).
    2. Assessment and Certification: They conduct exams and practical tests to certify that a trainee has actually mastered the required skills.
    3. Labour Market Information (LMIS): They track sector-specific data to predict which jobs will be in demand over the next 5 years, helping the government decide where to allocate funds.
    4. Train the Trainer (ToT): To ensure quality at the grassroots, SSCs train and license the instructors who work at various training centers across the country.
Jan Shikshan Sansthan (JSS) Scheme
  • A community-driven vocational training program aimed at women, rural youth, and economically weaker sections.
  • Provides low-cost, flexible skill development programs.
  • Linked with initiatives like PM JANMAN and Understanding of Lifelong Learning for All in Society (ULLAS) to ensure inclusive skilling.
  • Target Beneficiaries: Individuals aged 15-45 years.
ITIs
  • ITIs are the backbone of long-term vocational education in India.
  • They have been set up with the objective to ensure a steady flow of skilled personnel to the industry.
  • To further strengthen this ecosystem, PM–SETU (Pradhan Mantri Skilling and Employability Transformation through Upgraded ITIs) was launched in 2025 as a Centrally Sponsored Scheme.

Skill development in India
Source: PIB
Orange EconomyTo strengthen the talent pipeline in high-growth creative segments, the 2026-27 Budget emphasises setting up AVGC (Animation, Visual Effects, Gaming and Comics) Content Creator Labs in 15,000 secondary schools and 500 colleges.
With the AVGC sector projected to require nearly 2 million professionals by 2030, this initiative aims to build early-stage creative capacity, enhance industry-aligned skills, and strengthen India’s presence in global digital content production.

What can be the way forward to improve skill development in India?

  1. Focus on Outcomes (Not Degrees): Shift from measuring inputs (e.g., enrollments) to outcomes (e.g., job placement, productivity gains). Introduce an annual Skills and Employment Survey to track real employability.
  2. Mandatory Apprenticeships: Transitioning from optional to mandatory apprenticeship-linked degrees (e.g., the PM-NAPS expansion). This ensures students spend 50% of their time on the shop floor or in an office rather than just a classroom.
  3. Industry-integrated ITIs: Mandate industry participation in curriculum design. Modernizing Industrial Training Institutes (ITIs) through Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) where companies like Tata, Maruti, or Google “adopt” centers to install the latest equipment.
  4. Academic Credit Bank: Under the National Education Policy (NEP) 2020, credits earned from a welding or coding certificate can now be transferred to a formal university degree. Embed vocational subjects as electives from Class 8 under NEP 2020, with credit transfer between academic and skill streams for seamless mobility.
  5. Global Mobility: Signing Migration and Mobility Partnership Agreements (MMPAs) with countries like Germany, Japan, and France to ensure Indian certifications are recognized globally.
  6. Enforce Accountability: India’s skilling challenge is a failure of accountability, not of intent or government funding. Thus, focus on enforcing accountability in the institutions of the skilling ecosystem, especially in SSCs. Until SSCs are held accountable for employability, certification will remain symbolic rather than economic.
  7. Emphasizing Sunrise Sectors: Skilling efforts must pivot toward high-growth areas where the demand for labor exceeds supply for e.g. focusing on training 1.5 lakh caregivers for the healthcare sector and professionals for green mobility ensures India captures emerging global services markets.
  8. Innovative Financing: Utilizing public-private partnerships (PPP) and frameworks like the India Skills Accelerator (in collaboration with the World Economic Forum) to scale innovative skilling solutions. 
  9. Quality of Trainers: Create a formal “Vocational Educator Cadre” with mandatory industry immersion and continuous professional development to bridge the gap between teaching and industry realities.

Conclusion: When skills are embedded in degrees, when industry is treated as co-owner, and when SSCs are made answerable for placement outcomes, skilling move from fragmented welfare intervention to a pillar of national economic empowerment. Thus, focus on making India’s skilling ecosystem resilient & future-ready so that it can help in translating the country’s demographic advantage into broad-based, sustainable growth.

UPSC GS-3: Indian Economy
Read More: The Hindu, PIB, Sambhav Foundation
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