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

Thursday, 23 October 2025

One Nation-One Workforce

 



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

From Surface to System: 


How “One Nation-One Workforce” 

-  Echoes My 2019 Call for Organising the Unorganised


In 2019 I published my blog titled Organising Unorganised (published on

myblogepage.blogspot.com, February 2019) in which I argued that the vast

 segment of India’s labour force — outside the formal “organised” sector —

 remains without real visibility, rights, social-security or portability. Today, the

 Ministry of Labour and Employment has announced a bold move: the “One Nation

 Integrated Workforce Architecture” under the slogan One Nation, One

 Workforce”, designed to bring all workers — across states, sectors and

 informal/formal divides — onto one integrated platform. The Economic Times+1



This is another example of perseverance bearing fruit — the “P” in HCP stands

 firm.



Recap of the 2019 argument


In “Organising Unorganised” I set out the following key points:


  • The unorganised workforce in India is massive, fragmented, unregistered,

  •  and lacks portability of benefits, recognition, and a coherent link to public-

  • policy.


  • I called for a unified registration mechanism (digital number/ID) that tracks

  •  workers who move across jobs, states and sectors.


  • I argued for portable social-security (pensions, insurance, health,

  •  unemployment benefits) that “travels” with the worker.


  • I advocated for data-driven dashboards, real-time analytics on movements,

  •  skill transitions and earnings — enabling policy to be proactive rather than

  •  reactive.


  • I warned that mere piecemeal schemes won’t suffice: what’s needed is

  •  systemic re-engineering of how we treat labour as an asset not just as an

  •  input.



The 2025 Government Move


According to the news report:


  • The Ministry plans to develop a unified platform (“One Nation Integrated

  •  Workforce Architecture”) that will link databases of various ministries and

  •  states — thereby enabling portability of social-security benefits for all

  •  workers. The Economic Times+1


  • The architecture aims for “100% worker registration” and full portability

  •  under the universal social-security plan beyond 2030. The Economic Times


  • It intends to integrate AI-driven analytics for predictive policy planning, skill

  •  forecasting and risk-based inspections. The Economic Times


  • This initiative is explicitly addressed at the unorganised workforce and aims

  •  to bring them into the ambit of coverage. The Economic Times+1



Comparison: Vision (2019) → Action (2025)


#2019 Proposal (Organising Unorganised)2025 Move (One Nation-One Workforce)
1
Unified registration and digital ID for unorganised workers

The architecture aims for 100% registration across states/sectors.
2

Portability of social-security benefits (health, pension, insurance)


Explicit goal of portability of social-security benefits for all workers.
3

Data-driven system: dashboards, analytics, policy feedback loops


AI-driven analytics, integrated data flows across ministries, states.
4

Treating labour as asset: tracking mobility, skills, earnings, transitions


Linking databases across sectors so movement of workers is visible and policy responsive.
5

Systemic approach rather than isolated schemes


A unifying architecture rather than isolated schemes — aligning ministries and states.

Why This Matters


  • For millions of workers in informal/unorganised sector, this means

  • recognition, rights, portability — not just piecemeal benefits.


  • It bridges the “shadow zone” of labour mobility: when a person moves from

  •  one job to another, one state to another, their benefits, history and data

  •  move with them.


  • It promises a shift from reactive policy (after trouble) to predictive policy

  • (before trouble) through analytics.


  • It potentially elevates dignity — ordinary workers become part of the

  •  counted workforce, no longer invisible or outside.


  • However — implementation will determine success: registration is one thing,

  •  actual claim/benefit delivery another.



Next-Steps & My Call-to-Action


  • Workers: 

  • Ensure you are registered under the system when it becomes live; keep your

  •  data, movements, job transitions documented.


  • Employers/agencies: 

  • Participate proactively in the database link-up; ensure compliance with

  •  portability rules.


  • Policymakers & civil society: 

  • Monitor the rollout — focus on last-mile delivery, simple user interface,

  • mobile access, language diversity, transparency.


  • Myself: 

  • I will continue to track the progress of this architecture, publish regular

  •  updates, and advocate that it extends beyond wage-jobs to gig-workers,

  •  migrant workers, self-employed, etc.



Closing Thought


When you plant a seed in 2019 (“Organising the Unorganised”), you might not see

 the tree immediately. 


But in 2025 we see a sapling: a national architecture that embodies the seed.

 Perseverance matters — keep pushing the idea until the system catches up.

No comments:

Post a Comment