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This is what Tripura Chief Minister Biplab Deb said a few weeks ago at a seminar for the youth, revealing what he thought about the job market in his state. This statement came as a part of a series of gaffes from the chief minister, suddenly propelling the tiny, nondescript state of Tripura into limelight.
This specific statement on jobs – especially in a state that has one of the highest rates of unemployment in the country – ruffled a lot of feathers. Of Tripura’s 38 lakh population, 18.7 percent are unemployed. This, despite the state having a literacy rate of over 94 percent.
The Quint travelled to Agartala to speak to the youth and find out what they have to say about their chief minister’s take on jobs. Is it in tandem with what they expected from a new government after 25 years of the Left rule?
Most of the jobless youth in Tripura said that the problem in the state was not just the unavailability of jobs, but also the lack of jobs that match their skill set.
Anglo Debburma, 30, took up forestry as a specialisation during his graduation because he wanted to work in Tripura. However, since he graduated in 2013, the Forestry Department of the state government has made no recruitments. In fact, their last recruitment was in 2008. With a degree but nowhere to go, Anglo is still waiting for a job, and is thoroughly disappointed with the Chief Minister’s comment.
He also said, quite vehemently, that he’d never open a paan shop.
Debburma’s sentiments were resonated by Diptanil Das, a final year computer engineering student at the National Institute Of Technology, Agartala. He said that for an IT graduate like him, lack of software companies and similar industries in the state meant that he would have to leave Agartala after graduation.
Pritha Bhowmik, a final year law student, is worried about the lack of vacancies in the state judiciary and the lack of good lawyers to practise under.
In spite of the Chief Minister’s comments, most of the youngsters The Quint spoke to laid the blame for the lack of jobs squarely on the previous Left government. The lack of industries in the state was a culture that was brought about by the stagnancy of the previous government, they say.
While all of them agreed that Deb could probably use a better speechwriter, they felt that he had a point. Government jobs would not satisfy the job requirements of the state and the youth must be empowered to start their own ventures.
Just not a paan shop!
Like Nag, Manik Chakraborty, a teacher at a government college, agreed that the youth needs to be made business-literate so that they could start their own ventures.
Well, two things:
a) Open up vacant government jobs for recruitment, and
b) Invite more industries into the state.
“The government should take the initiative because government jobs are limited and applications are increasing every day,” said Das.
Nag, on the other hand, believed that if the intrinsic job culture of the state doesn’t change, the youth would remain demotivated.
Saumyarup Nath, a senior of Deb from college, also felt the same way. Local entrepreneurs and businessmen must be sensitised to helping the youth when they start their own ventures, he felt.
The youth now hope that a new regime would, indeed, mean a new beginning for the state.
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