Discuss in detail the features of the Periodic Labor Force Survey (PLFS) and the significance of its recent changes in the context of Indian Economy?
The Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) was launched by the National Statistics Office under MoSPI in April 2017 with the view of making labour force data available at more frequent time intervals. The objective of PLFS has been primarily twofold:
- to estimate the key employment and unemployment indicators (viz. Worker Population Ratio, Labour Force Participation Rate, Unemployment Rate) in the short time interval of three months for the urban areas only in the ‘Current Weekly Status’ (CWS).
- to estimate employment and unemployment indicators in both ‘Usual Status’ and CWS in both rural and urban areas annually.
Key Employment and Unemployment Indicators associated with PLFS:
Labor Force Participation Rate (LFPR):
It is defined as the percentage of persons in the labour force (i.e. working or seeking or available for work) in the population.
Worker Population Ratio (WPR):
It is defined as the percentage of employed persons in the population.
Unemployment Rate (UR):
It is defined as the percentage of persons unemployed among the persons in the labour force.
Activity Status:
Usual Status
The activity status of a person is determined on the basis of the activities pursued by the person during the specified reference period. When the activity status is determined on the basis of the reference period of last 365 days preceding the date of survey, it is known as the usual activity status of the person.
Principal activity status (ps)
The activity status on which a person spent relatively long time (major time criterion) during 365 days preceding the date of survey, was considered as the usual principal activity status of the person.
Subsidiary economic activity status (ss)
The activity status in which a person in addition to his/her usual principal status, performs some economic activity for 30 days or more for the reference period of 365 days preceding the date of survey, was considered as the subsidiary economic activity status of the person.
Usual status (ps+ss) is determined considering both principal activity status (ps) and subsidiary economic activity status (ss) together.
Current Weekly Status (CWS)
The activity status determined on the basis of a reference period of last 7 days preceding the date of survey is known as the current weekly status (CWS) of the person.
Key changes in the PLFS announced by MoSPI in 2025:
- First time ever: Monthly release of labour indicators like, Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR), Worker Population Ratio (WPR), Unemployment Rate (UR), at the all-India level.
- It will be based on Current Weekly Status (CWS).
- Quarterly Estimates Extended: Estimates of employment unemployment indicators will now covers both rural and urban areas (previously urban only).
- Annual Reports on Calendar Year Basis: New cycle will be January–December format (Previous: July–June format)
- This ensures better alignment with international databases.
- Enhanced Sample Size: The sample size of households has been increased by 2.65 times. This improves the precision and reliability of labor market indicator estimates.
- Improved Geographical Representation: District made the primary geographical unit for most areas, improving localized data collection.
- Rural stratification is based on village distance—within 5 km of district headquarters or cities/towns with over 5 lakh population.
Findings of PLFS 2023-24:
Labour Force Participation Rate (LFPR)
In Urban areas, LFPR increased for males (74.3% in 2023 to 75.6% in 2024) and slightly for females (25.5% to 25.8%), leading to an overall rise in LFPR (50.3% to 51.0%). Overall LFPR remained constant at 56.2%, despite minor variations across categories.
Worker Population Ratio (WPR)
Slight improvements were seen across all categories, particularly in the overall WPR (47.0% to 47.6%) in Urban areas. At all India level overall WPR remained relatively unchanged (53.4% to 53.5%).
Unemployment Rate (UR)
In rural area, marginal decline in overall unemployment (4.3% to 4.2%), with slight reductions for both men and women. In urban male unemployment rose (6.0% to 6.1%), but female unemployment declined (8.9% to 8.2%), keeping the overall urban rate stable at 6.7%. At all India level, Unemployment saw a minor drop (5.0% to 4.9%), suggesting slight improvements in employment opportunities.
Decline in unpaid helpers in household enterprises seems to have contributed to the drop in WPR as well as LFPR among rural females, as the percentage of “helpers in Household Enterprises” decreased from 19.9% to 18.1% from 2023 to 2024.
Significance of an updated PLFS in Indian economy:
- The PLFS provides frequent data on different metrics so that the policymakers can understand the proportion of people demanding work, the proportion of people among them who failed to get a job, the gender differences in employment as well as wages etc.
- The PLFS also tells the sectoral distribution of workers in the economy — what percentage is involved in agriculture, for instance.
- It also records the type of work people do — for instance, how many are engaged in casual labour, how many work for themselves and how many have regular salaried jobs etc.
Hence, for a country with the largest youth population in the world and an economy in the phase of reaping demographic dividend, a fine tuned labor survey such as these will be helpful in realizing our potential and addressing our shortcomings. As India’s economy grows and seeks global investors, credible and timely data will be non-negotiable.
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