Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Sunday, 29 March 2026

Unified Financial Identity Layer (UFIL)

=====================================================================
 
Respected Governor Sir,

Further to my recent mail regarding the Unified Mandate Dashboard, I was greatly encouraged to note

 the RBI’s latest directive mandating Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) and Unique Transaction Identifier

 (UTI) for financial market transactions.


With this, RBI has effectively established two foundational pillars:

  • LEI → Identity of the participant (WHO)

  • UTI → Identity of the transaction (WHAT)

Together, these create what may be viewed as a complete “financial DNA architecture” for

 institutional markets — enabling traceability, transparency, and systemic risk monitoring at an

 unprecedented level.


Sir, 

this development appears to complete the deeper structural layer of a vision I had earlier explored

 conceptually in my public writings around Unified Transaction Identity and financial convergence.


In this context, I humbly submit a forward-looking thought:

What LEI + UTI is achieving for institutions today, could potentially be extended to

individuals tomorrow — creating a Unified Financial Identity Layer for citizens.


Such a layer could:

  • Provide individuals a single, intelligent view of all financial relationships

  • Enable real-time tracking, control, and optimization of financial commitments

  • Serve as a foundation for AI-driven financial decision support, within a consent-based

  • framework

In essence, this could evolve into a “Financial Operating System” for every citizen, built upon the

strong regulatory architecture that RBI is now putting in place.


I submit this thought with utmost respect, and only in the spirit of contributing to the ongoing evolution

of India’s digital financial ecosystem.


Warm regards,


Hemen Parekh


www.YourContentCreator.in / 30 March 2026


===================================================================

From LEI + UTI to a Unified Financial Identity Layer for

 Citizens


Submitted by: Hemen Parekh


Date: 30 March 2026


1. Context

The Reserve Bank of India has recently mandated:

  • Legal Entity Identifier (LEI) → Unique identification of financial participants
  • Unique Transaction Identifier (UTI) → Unique identification of transactions

This applies to financial market transactions (OTC derivatives, forex, G-Secs, etc.) and represents a

major step towards system-wide traceability and transparency.


2. Structural Significance

The LEI + UTI framework creates two foundational pillars:

LayerFunction

LEI

Identifies WHO is participating

UTI
I
dentifies WHAT transaction is occurring

👉 Together, this forms a complete financial traceability architecture — analogous to a “Financial

      DNA System” for institutional markets.


3. Conceptual Continuity

This development aligns with earlier conceptual thinking around:


  • Unified Transaction Identity (UTI) (2016)

  • Interoperable Financial Ecosystems (2018)

  • Convergence of Wallets, Accounts, and Platforms (2021)


👉 RBI’s current move represents the institutionalization of these foundational ideas at the market

      level.


4. The Missing Layer: Citizen-Level Financial Identity


While LEI + UTI strengthens institutional infrastructure, a natural next step emerges:


Extending this architecture to individuals (retail users)

 

Proposed Concept:

Unified Financial Identity Layer (UFIL)


5. What UFIL Could Enable

A citizen-level financial identity layer could provide:

🔹 Unified Visibility

  • Single view of all:

    • Bank accounts

    • UPI mandates

    • Wallets

    • Investments

    • Credit obligations

🔹 Intelligent Control

  • Modify / pause / cancel commitments

  • Optimize subscriptions and liabilities

🔹 AI-Driven Insights

  • Spending pattern analysis

  • Predictive alerts

  • Financial health scoring

🔹 Consent-Based Architecture


  • Built on existing frameworks like:

    • Account Aggregator

    • Data Empowerment & Protection Architecture (DEPA)

6. Strategic Benefits

StakeholderBenefit


Citizens


Better control, transparency, financial well-being

Regulators

Improved monitoring, early risk detection

Financial System

Reduced inefficiencies, higher trust


Fintech Ecosystem


Innovation layer for intelligent services

7. Evolution Path (Suggested Roadmap)

PhaseDescription

Phase 1

LEI + UTI (Institutional Layer) ✅

Phase 2

Unified Mandate Dashboard (Visibility Layer) ✅

Phase 3

UFIL – Citizen Financial Identity Layer
(Next Step)

Phase 4

AI-driven Financial Operating System (Future State)

8. Key Insight

LEI + UTI provides the “DNA of transactions.”

 

UFIL can make this DNA visible, actionable, and beneficial for every citizen.


9. Conclusion

The RBI has already laid the core architectural foundation for a unified financial ecosystem.

Extending this to a citizen-centric financial identity layer can position India as a global leader in:

  • Digital public infrastructure

  • Financial inclusion

  • AI-driven financial governance

10. Closing Note

This note is submitted with utmost respect, in the spirit of contributing to the ongoing evolution of

 India’s financial architecture.

Good Faith Decision Recording Protocol

========================================================================


Respected Shri Narendra Modiji,

Pranam.

I write to you in the backdrop of the recent acquittal of former Coal Secretary Shri H.C. Gupta and others in the coal block allocation case, after a prolonged judicial process spanning more than a decade.

The Court has effectively affirmed that:

  • The decisions were taken within the framework of policy,
  • There was no mala fide intent or personal gain,
  • And yet, the individuals concerned had to undergo years of uncertainty and scrutiny.

Sir, this development is not merely a closure of a past case — it is a powerful reminder of a systemic challenge in governance.


The Core Issue: Fear-Induced Decision Paralysis

Today, many honest officers and Ministers face a silent dilemma:

“Even if my decision is well-intentioned, will I be questioned years later with the benefit of hindsight?”

This fear often leads to:

  • Delayed approvals
  • Excessive file movement
  • Avoidance of bold decisions

In short — governance slows down.


My Humble Submission (From My 2014 Suggestion: “  To err is human”  )

Over a decade ago, I had suggested a simple but powerful solution:

👉 Instead of trying to eliminate all risk from decision-making,
👉 We must institutionalize transparency of thought at the time of decision-making.

I now humbly propose that this be formalized as a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) across Government.


Proposed SOP: “Good Faith Decision Recording Protocol”

Every significant administrative decision (by officers and Ministers) should mandatorily include a structured note on file, capturing the following:


1. Information Gaps Acknowledged

  • What information or data the decision-maker wished was available,
    but was not accessible at the time of taking the decision.

2. Diversity of Views Considered

  • What different views / opinions were presented
    during consultations, discussions, or file notings.

3. Constraints of Time

  • What additional data or perspectives could have been obtained
    if more time were available.

4. Stakeholder Impact Awareness

  • Who all the decision might offend or adversely affect,
    including departments, individuals, or interest groups.

5. Cost of Inaction

  • What is the likely cost of postponing or deferring the decision,
    in terms of:
    • Economic loss
    • Administrative delay
    • Public inconvenience

6. Declaration of Integrity

A clear, recorded declaration:

“This decision is not likely to benefit any of my near relatives or friends, directly or immediately.”


Why This SOP is Transformational

Sir, such a system will:

✔ Shift evaluation from outcome-based judgment to process-based assessment
✔ Protect honest officers who act in good faith
✔ Create a documented trail of intent, constraints, and reasoning
✔ Reduce fear of retrospective scrutiny
✔ Encourage faster, more confident decision-making


Relevance to the Recent Coal Case

The acquittal of Shri H.C. Gupta highlights that:

  • Decisions taken honestly can still be questioned years later
  • Absence of structured “decision context recording” makes retrospective evaluation difficult
  • Investigations often rely on outcomes, rather than intent and constraints at the time

👉 Had such an SOP existed earlier, much of the prolonged uncertainty may have been avoided.


A Governance Opportunity

Sir, your leadership has consistently emphasized:

  • Transparency
  • Accountability
  • Efficiency

This SOP uniquely strengthens all three — while also adding a fourth pillar:

👉 Administrative Courage


Concluding Appeal

I humbly submit that:

“If we want faster governance, we must protect honest decision-making — not by eliminating scrutiny, but by documenting intent.”

The recent verdict offers a timely opportunity to institutionalize this principle across Government of India.

I sincerely hope you will consider introducing this as a nationwide SOP, enabling officers and Ministers to take decisions boldly, transparently, and without fear.

With highest respect and regards,

Yours sincerely,


Hemen Parekh


www.YourContentCreator.in  /  29 March 2026

 

Electrifying India Energy Stack

Electrifying India Energy Stack

Electrifying India Energy Stack

Introduction

The India Energy Stack (IES) is not just a digital architecture—it's a lever that will amplify electrification across the economy. As I watch the IES move from concept to pilots and architecture v0.3, I see its potential to transform how we generate, store, move and use electricity in India. This piece walks through the practical interactions between electrification and the IES, the opportunities and risks, a few illustrative examples, and five actionable recommendations for policymakers and energy professionals.

Background: what is the IES?

In short, the IES is being designed as a Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) for the power sector: open registries, unique digital IDs for assets and consumers, standardized data formats, and open APIs that enable interoperable services across generation, transmission, distribution and end-use applications PIB press release. The IES architecture and the Utility Intelligence Platform (UIP) piloted under it will provide real-time visibility and a sandbox for market and consumer-facing innovations RenewableWatch overview.

I have argued before for practical pilots that combine smart metering, behavioural incentives and carbon credits to shift consumption patterns—my SEEM proposal (Save Energy, Earn Money) is one such example of demand-side transformation that aligns well with the IES vision SEEM pilot proposal.

How electrification interacts with the IES

The IES is the digital fabric that makes large-scale electrification not only possible but efficient and equitable. Below I break this down across key domains.

1) Generation — visibility, forecasting and market participation

  • Real-time asset registries and standardized telemetry let renewable generators (utility-scale and distributed rooftop) publish accurate, auditable generation forecasts. Better forecasts reduce reserves and improve market efficiency.
  • IES-enabled identity and settlement layers will allow small generators and aggregators to participate in markets (P2P trading, VPPs) without bespoke integration work.

Practical effect: higher renewable dispatch, lower curtailment, and faster monetisation for prosumers.

2) Storage — integration, services and valuation

  • Storage becomes a tradable, visible asset in the IES: charging/discharging schedules, ancillary services (frequency, inertia replacement), and state-of-health can be standardized.
  • Market designs that recognise multi-service value (capacity, arbitrage, ancillary, deferred T&D) become implementable when the IES provides transparent telemetry and settlement.

Result: investors can underwrite storage projects with clearer revenue stacking, driving deeper penetration of batteries, pumped hydro, and emerging chemistries.

3) Grids — distributed control and resilient operations

  • Feeder- and device-level visibility enables near real-time topology-aware control. The UIP layer can host digital twins for scenario planning and outage restoration.
  • Dynamic line ratings, demand response orchestration and automated islanding for microgrids are practical when the data plumbing is standardized.

Outcome: fewer faults, better hosting capacity for DERs, and lower operational losses.

4) Sector coupling — EVs, heat, industry

  • Electric vehicles, heat pumps, and industrial electrification become controllable loads and flexible resources when registered in IES with agreed interfaces (V2G, V2X).
  • The IES enables coordinated charging, time-of-use incentives, and integration of EV batteries into grid services under clear consent frameworks.

What that means: the same electrification that increases demand becomes a source of dispatchable flexibility.

Economic and social impacts

  • DISCOM efficiency: real-time energy accounting and automated settlements reduce commercial losses and billing disputes.
  • Consumer empowerment: unified consumption dashboards, green-tariff choices, and easier switching lower barriers for prosumers and micro-enterprises.
  • Jobs & industry: platform standards catalyze startups and local manufacturing in storage, smart devices and energy fintech.
  • Inclusion risk: if not designed with multi-channel access, vulnerable populations may be excluded from benefits.

Challenges and risks

  • Data governance & privacy: consent, anonymization and access controls must be ironclad.
  • Cybersecurity: increased attack surface across devices and market interfaces needs national-grade protections.
  • Legacy systems and skill gaps: many utilities will need structured upgrades and capacity building.
  • Market design misalignment: absent robust settlement rules, prosumer participation can create settlement disputes and hidden subsidies.

Policy and market measures I recommend

  • Mandate open API standards and device-level metadata schemas; adopt them in procurement for any publicly financed asset.
  • Create a cleared, multi-service valuation framework for storage and flexibility that regulators can adopt for tariffs and tenders.
  • Launch capacity-building programmes for DISCOMs on IT-OT integration and cybersecurity under Revamped Distribution Sector Scheme pilots.
  • Set up a national data-governance charter for energy DPI—consent-first, auditable access logs, and tiered anonymisation.
  • Design sandboxed market pilots (UIP-hosted) where P2P trading, dynamic tariffs and VPP aggregation can be trialled with consumer protection guardrails.

Case studies & examples

  • UIP pilots in Mumbai, Delhi and Gujarat are already being used to validate IES use cases such as feeder-level analytics and consumer dashboards source overview.
  • My SEEM proposal (Save Energy, Earn Money) demonstrates how smart metering plus behavioural and carbon incentives can drive measurable residential savings—an excellent match for IES-enabled consumer services SEEM pilot proposal.
  • Large renewable build-outs (for example, recent project pipelines in Rajasthan) will benefit from IES-enabled inter-state scheduling, forecasting, and transmission optimisation—reducing curtailment and improving bankability.

Conclusion

Electrification without a coherent digital foundation will be costly and slow. The India Energy Stack is that foundation: when implemented with open standards, strong data governance and market-savvy regulation, it turns electrification into a flexible, inclusive, investible transition. IES is not a magic bullet—technical, institutional and social work remains—but it is the multiplier that will make the next decade of India’s power revolution deliver cleaner, cheaper, and more reliable electricity for all.


Five actionable recommendations

  1. Pilot storage-as-a-service revenue stacking in UIP sandboxes with clear settlement rules.
  2. Require open API compliance for all central funds to DISCOM digital upgrades.
  3. Fund a national cyber-incident response centre dedicated to energy DPI.
  4. Launch consumer-facing inclusion programs (SMS, call-centres, community kiosks) for IES services.
  5. Fast-track regulator-approved templates for P2P and VPP participation agreements to reduce legal uncertainty.

Regards,
Hemen Parekh (hcp@recruitguru.com)


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Hello Candidates :

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"How can the India Energy Stack enable small rooftop solar owners to participate in electricity markets without adding regulatory burden on DISCOMs?"
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One Licence, Many Questions

One Licence, Many Questions

Why India’s blanket licence matters to me

I have been watching the debate around how generative AI systems are trained with a mix of hope and worry. The recent push by the Centre — proposing a mandatory blanket licence that lets AI developers use all lawfully accessed copyrighted works for training while creating a central royalty-collection mechanism — is one of those policy moments that feels designed to force a national choice about innovation, fairness and cultural stewardship (Economic Times, TechCrunch).

I wrote about the urgency of shaping AI’s rules before — the risks, the runaway possibilities and the need for a public framework — in an earlier piece where I argued that warnings are useful only if we design solutions in time "Warning is good : Solutions are better". That same impatience is what makes this blanket-licence proposal so compelling and so alarming at once.

What the proposal promises (in plain terms)

  • A single, mandatory licence that allows AI firms to use any content they lawfully access to train models.
  • Statutory remuneration for creators administered by a central collecting body (often discussed as CRCAT or similar).
  • Royalty rates set by a government-appointed committee and collected post-commercialisation, often as a percentage of revenue.
  • Simplified compliance for developers and a single-window mechanism for rights-holders to be paid (PolicyEdge summary).

The intent is clear: remove the high transaction costs and legal uncertainty that make universal licensing impractical, while ensuring creators are compensated.

The upside I can see

  • Practicality for startups: No one wants a thousand individual negotiations before training a model. A statutory, post-commercialisation payment reduces upfront barriers and encourages innovation.
  • Cultural completeness: Models trained on richer, more diverse Indian-language and cultural content can be more useful for our country — an argument the proposal explicitly makes when it stresses India-centric benchmarks and multilingual evaluation.
  • Redistribution potential: A well-run collecting body could reach otherwise unorganised creators and artists who today are invisible to the platform economy.

And the deep problems we must not ignore

  • Loss of agency for creators: For many artists and authors, the ability to opt out or negotiate terms is part of how they control their work and livelihood. Mandating compulsory use without a granular consent mechanism risks disempowering creators.
  • Distribution fairness: Central collection bodies often face governance capture. Without transparent, auditable distribution rules and strong representation for small creators, royalties can be swallowed by intermediaries.
  • Technical opacity: The industry’s argument that you cannot trace which exact records “contributed” to a probabilistic model’s output is valid. That makes attribution-based micro-payments practically impossible — so revenue-sharing must be designed carefully to avoid perverse incentives.
  • Global mismatch: If other jurisdictions adopt different rules, companies operating across borders will face complexity. India’s model would need clear rules about extraterritorial content and cross-border revenue.

Practical design principles I'd insist on

  1. Transparency by design
  • Mandatory, machine-readable disclosures about categories and broad sources of training data (not proprietary details), audited by an independent regulator.
  1. Strong governance for the collecting body
  • Democratic representation from many classes of creators, independent auditors, and open publishing of allocation rules and payments.
  1. Tiered royalty rules
  • Different treatment for non-commercial research, educational uses and small-scale startups (for example, revenue thresholds or graduated rates) so innovation isn’t strangled at birth.
  1. Registry and outreach for unorganised creators
  • A simple registry (with low friction) so musicians, writers and independent artists can claim their share; funds should be held for three years for works that register later, as some proposals suggested.
  1. Sunset clauses and periodic review
  • Build in a three-year review with clear outcome metrics (impact on creator income, startup formation, model quality, and cultural coverage). Policy without staged review becomes ossified.
  1. Exemptions for non-commercial research and public-interest uses
  • The public good in language models (education, public-health tools, preservation of endangered languages) must not be sacrificed.

Where I worry about implementation

  • Who sets the royalty percentage? If it’s too high, it will push companies offshore or kill local startups. If too low, creators will rightly feel cheated.
  • How do we ensure the collecting body doesn’t become a monopoly gatekeeper? Competition, audits and judicial review of rates must be available.
  • Can this scale globally? India can pioneer a model, but interoperability with other regimes (EU, US, Japan) will determine long-term outcomes for multinational platforms.

My modest, concrete suggestions for policymakers

  • Pilot the CRCAT model with defined scope: start with news and published text, learn, then expand to music, images and video.
  • Publish the data-disclosure template and invite open feedback from technologists and civil society to make it practical and privacy-preserving.
  • Create a small exemptions committee for public-interest projects (education, public health, language preservation).
  • Make the rate-setting process public and evidence-driven: require proponents to show how rates affect startup viability and creator incomes.

Closing, personal note

Policy at this intersection — culture, technology and economics — is always messy. I lean toward solutions that preserve creators’ dignity while keeping lanes open for innovators. The blanket licence is an ambitious attempt to square that circle. Its success will depend less on the idea and more on the details: governance, transparency, and a willingness to iterate.

If we do this well, India could set a humane standard: not choosing between creators and AI, but designing a space where both can flourish.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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When PILs Wait Decades

When PILs Wait Decades

A 42‑year reminder: why PIL pendency matters

I read the recent disclosure from the Law Ministry with a mix of concern and a strange, weary recognition. The Ministry told Parliament that there are roughly 3,525 public interest litigations (PILs) pending in the Supreme Court, with 698 pending for more than ten years — and the oldest dating back to 1984 Law Ministry data and reported in the press Times of India. That single line — 42 years — should make us sit up.

PILs were born as an instrument to widen access to justice: to allow citizens, groups and public-spirited lawyers to ask the courts to protect environmental commons, the rights of the vulnerable, or systemic public harms. They are, in their ideal form, a civic corrective — a mechanism to bring large, structural questions before a constitutional forum.

Yet when PILs themselves are stalled for decades, their moral and practical force is diminished. Justice delayed is not merely a slogan; for many PILs the petitioner, the injured community, or the ecological subject may not survive to see redress.

Why this backlog is significant

  • Scale: 3,525 PILs sit within an apex-court docket that already has tens of thousands of matters. The Court’s overall pendency compounds the problem. (Law Ministry data)
  • Age: Hundreds of PILs are older than a decade; the oldest is four decades old. Long age blunts remedies and reduces the urgency that PILs are meant to secure.
  • Fresh inflow: The Court admitted 570 PILs in 2025 alone, outpacing the pace of disposal and increasing strategic congestion.

These numbers matter not only statistically but morally: membership of the public interest changes over time, evidence degrades, ecosystems evolve. A remedy pronounced after decades often answers a historical question, not a present one.

Causes of the backlog

Several structural reasons explain why PILs accumulate:

  • Complexity and scope: PILs often raise policy‑scale or scientific questions (environment, land, tenancy) that require extensive fact-finding, technical inputs and layered hearings.
  • Judicial bottlenecks: Limited judicial capacity at the apex and high courts, combined with overall vacancies across lower judiciaries, reduces throughput.
  • Procedural accumulation: Repeated adjournments, interlocutory appeals, and overlapping petitions multiply court time.
  • Lack of time‑tracking: As the Ministry noted, average disposal times for PILs are not systematically maintained, making targeted management difficult.
  • Institutional choices: Sometimes the Supreme Court becomes the forum of first resort for administrative or policy disputes, increasing docket pressure.

Implications for justice and governance

  • Erosion of trust: Long delays send a message that structural public claims cannot be timely addressed by constitutional institutions.
  • Policy paralysis: When courts are used repeatedly to prod or direct executive action but cannot resolve matters promptly, administrative inertia persists.
  • Resource misallocation: Judicial time spent sorting procedural multiplicity can crowd out attention to urgent constitutional questions.
  • Access inequality: While PILs are intended to help those without resources, protracted litigation benefits those who can sustain long legal fights and hurts ordinary claimants.

Practical reforms and solutions I still believe in

Over the years I have written about judicial backlog and practical tech-enabled fixes; many suggestions remain relevant today (see my earlier reflections on judicial pendency and virtual courts, e.g., “Courts cannot Cope” and related posts). I offer a balanced, realistic menu of reforms:

  • Triage and prioritisation: Create a fast‑track registry within the Supreme Court for PILs that concern imminent public harm (environmental emergencies, mass human rights violations) and set statutory target timelines.
  • Dedicated benches and case teams: Empanel specialized benches and support teams (law clerks, technical experts) for thematic PIL clusters — environmental, land, tenancy — to avoid scattershot hearings.
  • Use retired and ad hoc judges strategically: Where constitutional provisions allow, engage retired judges or ad hoc benches to clear legacy PIL dockets with clear mandates and timelines.
  • Strengthen fact‑finding: Institutionalize court‑appointed expert panels and neutral technical assessors so that scientific or administrative questions do not require interminable hearings.
  • Scale up e‑court mechanisms: Expand virtual hearing capacity, digital case management and public portals for filings, evidence and monitoring — not to replace reasoned adjudication but to remove administrative friction. This is an idea I have argued for repeatedly: technology should reduce delay, not dilute due process.
  • Data and transparency: Maintain and publish average disposal times for PILs, age-wise inventories, and a yearly action plan to clear the oldest matters.
  • Encourage alternative fora: For certain classes of public interest (local environmental remediation, municipal governance), strengthen specialized tribunals and administrative remediation channels so that the Supreme Court is not the only lever.

A caution and a hope

Any reform must preserve PILs’ democratic purpose. Fast disposal cannot translate into superficial judgments or institutional gatekeeping that shuts citizens out. The goal is not to thin the docket for its own sake, but to ensure timely, substantive remedies.

I remain optimistic. The disclosure itself is an opportunity: recognizing the problem is a first step toward redesign. If we pair institutional candour with practical measures — triage, technical capacity, better data and selective digitisation — we can restore PILs to their original purpose: a living, responsive instrument for public justice.

Conclusion

A PIL pending for 42 years is a civic rebuke. It tells us that systems intended to protect the public good can become captive to delay. That is not inevitable. With clarity of purpose, targeted triage and smart use of technology and personnel, we can reduce the time between grievance and remedy — and make sure public interest litigation remains truly in the public interest.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Graduates Without Jobs

Graduates Without Jobs

Introduction

A recent Times of India headline caught my attention: “67% of India’s unemployed youth are graduates” — a striking way to summarise a deeper finding in the State of Working India 2026 analysis Times of India. The number — 67% — is a wake-up call. It tells us that the profile of unemployment in India has shifted: it is increasingly concentrated among those who have completed tertiary education.

In this post I want to unpack what that figure means, why it has emerged, how it affects real people, and what practical steps we can take — at the policy and individual level — to change course.

What the headline really says (and what it doesn’t)

The headline summarises a finding from the wider report: among unemployed youth (roughly ages 20–29), 67% held a graduate degree in 2023. That reflects two simultaneous trends:

  • A rapid expansion in higher education enrolment over the last two decades.
  • Job creation — especially stable salaried jobs — has not kept pace with the growing supply of degree-holders.

Important caveats: the 67% is a share of the unemployed youth population, not the unemployment rate among graduates. It does not mean 67% of graduates are unemployed. It also reflects demographic and regional patterns: some states and cities absorb graduates better than others, and outcomes vary by field of study and gender.

(Source: Times of India summary of the "State of Working India 2026" report.)

Why are so many graduates among the unemployed?

Several interacting reasons help explain this structural challenge:

  • Skill mismatch: Many graduates complete degrees that give them theory but not the practical, industry-aligned skills employers want.
  • Variable education quality: Not all colleges provide the same level of teaching, mentorship, or placement support.
  • Job-market transformation: Automation, digitisation and new business models have changed the kinds of entry-level roles available.
  • Supply outpacing demand: India now produces millions of graduates a year; the number of stable formal-sector jobs has not grown at the same rate.
  • Regional disparities: Urban hubs and particular states create more demand for graduates than others, leaving many regions with limited opportunities.

These are not mutually exclusive — they combine to make the market tougher for many degree-holders.

Interpreting the 67%: reading data responsibly

Numbers need context. The 67% figure is useful to signal a change in composition of unemployment, but we should avoid over-reading it:

  • It highlights the scale of the problem but not each graduate’s story.
  • It points to structural issues (education, jobs, policy) more than to the personal failings of young people.
  • It should prompt better measurement: more frequent, granular labour-market data broken down by course, location, gender and sector.

Human impact: beyond the statistics

Behind the headline are young people whose aspirations meet a stubborn labour market. Common consequences include:

  • Underemployment: working in jobs that don’t use their qualifications or pay commensurately.
  • Lost early-career earnings and slower lifetime income growth.
  • Mental health stress and demotivation from prolonged job search.

These impacts ripple across families and communities, shaping life choices and social mobility.

Policy responses and practical steps (solution-oriented)

There is no single silver bullet. But a mix of policy shifts and practical initiatives can help:

  • Education reform: align curricula with workplace needs, introduce project-based learning and stronger industry linkages.
  • Expand vocational and apprenticeship routes as respected alternatives to a purely academic pathway.
  • Employer engagement: incentives for firms to offer structured entry-level roles, on-the-job training and internships.
  • Entrepreneurship support: easier access to seed funding, mentorship and market linkages for startups founded by youth.
  • Better labour-market data: real-time vacancy tracking and course-to-job mapping to guide students and policymakers.

At the individual level, job seekers can benefit from targeted reskilling (short courses, internships), local networking, and an openness to rotational early-career roles that build experience.

Voices and perspectives (typical, hypothetical)

  • “We have talented graduates, but they often lack hands-on exposure,” a typical industry recruiter might say. This highlights the need for internships and applied learning.
  • A young job-seeker could say, “I’m willing to work, but I’m offered only low-pay temporary work that doesn’t use my degree.” That points to underemployment and mismatched expectations.
  • Policymakers often emphasise the need to balance higher education expansion with investments in skill-building and job creation.

These are representative perspectives, not direct quotes from named individuals.

Where my thinking connects to earlier writing

As I have argued before — see my post Jobs ? Yes - Required Skills ? No — expanding access to degrees is only the first step. We must pair that with meaningful skilling and clearer pathways into employment. To see that continuity is to accept that today’s headline is part of a long-running challenge.

(Author note: Hemen Parekh (hcp@recruitguru.com))

Conclusion — a call to action

The Times of India headline is a clear alarm bell: the profile of youth unemployment is changing. The response must be equally clear — better alignment between education and work, stronger employer responsibility for early-career training, and policies that create more stable, productive opportunities for young people.

If you are a student, educator, employer or policymaker, consider what concrete step you can take this month: mentor a recent graduate, create a short paid internship, pilot a course redesign, or support local apprenticeship programs. Small, sustained changes add up.


Regards, Hemen Parekh (hcp@recruitguru.com)


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main reasons that a higher share of unemployed youth are graduates, and how can education systems better align degrees with labour market needs?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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