Hirings rise

Blitz Bureau

NEW DELHI: India’s white-collar job market showed signs of resilience in August and in a surprising shift, the growth was powered not by IT or banking, but by non-IT industries such as insurance, hospitality, and real estate. The latest Naukri JobSpeak Index rose to 2,664, a modest 3 per cent year-on-year increase, underscoring both new opportunities and emerging risks for the economy.

Non-IT anchor
Insurance led the hiring race with a 24 per cent annual rise, driven by strong recruitment across metros including Delhi-NCR and Kolkata. Hospitality and travel followed closely with 22 per cent growth, fuelled by rising consumer demand and a surge in fresher hiring. Real estate and education also posted double-digit gains, pointing to a broader shift in demand outside traditional tech jobs.

By contrast, the IT/software sector contracted 6 per cent, while banking and finance slipped 11 per cent, raising concerns about the stability of two sectors long seen as the backbone of white-collar employment.

Hyderabad high
The standout story of August was Hyderabad’s emergence as India’s startup capital. Hiring in startups jumped 30 per cent, while unicorns posted an extraordinary 45 per cent surge, making the city a magnet for talent and innovation.
Artificial intelligence and machine learning roles also surged nationwide, up 54 per cent year-on-year, with metros such as Kolkata, Delhi-NCR, and Chennai leading the push. Analysts say this reflects India’s transition towards advanced technologies and new-age skills.

India’s hiring story is broadening, but whether this marks a lasting transformation or a temporary detour will depend on how quickly the country bridges the gaps between skills, sectors, and cities.

Beyond the big cities
While metros still dominate the hiring charts, tier-2 and tier-3 cities are no longer on the sidelines. Udaipur, Mysuru, Siliguri, and Coimbatore all recorded healthy job gains, as employers increasingly look beyond India’s major hubs for cost-efficient and eager talent. This decentralisation is seen as vital for balanced national growth, though questions remain about whether smaller cities have the training infrastructure to keep pace with demand.

The hiring wave has not lifted all boats equally. Freshers (0–3 years) saw jobs grow by 7 per cent, especially in hospitality and insurance. Senior professionals with 16+ years of experience also benefited, with demand rising 8 per cent, largely in leadership roles. But mid-level professionals, once the backbone of India’s corporate ladder, saw only modest gains. This imbalance, experts warn, could squeeze the middle class if left unchecked.

Opportunity or warning?

While the diversification of hiring is good news for India’s economy, the overall growth rate remains subdued. A 3 per cent increase is far from the double-digit expansions seen in pre-pandemic years. The softness in IT and BFSI — key drivers of exports and urban consumption — casts a shadow over long-term momentum.
Moreover, while AI and startup roles are booming, they remain niche opportunities. Without large-scale skilling programmes, most graduates risk being left behind.

Fragile recovery
The August numbers highlight both promise and peril. On one hand, the surge in insurance, hospitality, and startups reflects a resilient, diversifying economy that is creating opportunities in new sectors and cities. On the other, the continued weakness in IT and finance signals that India’s job recovery is uneven and fragile.

Industry observers agree on one point: non-IT sectors are providing a much-needed cushion, but they cannot replace the scale of IT-driven growth. For sustainable progress, India will need to strengthen its skill base, revive its core engines, and ensure opportunities flow evenly across experience levels.

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