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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:
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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.
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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
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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
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For millions of workers in informal/unorganised sector, this means
recognition, rights, portability — not just piecemeal benefits.
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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.
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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
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Workers:
Ensure you are registered under the system when it becomes live; keep your
data, movements, job transitions documented.
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Employers/agencies:
Participate proactively in the database link-up; ensure compliance with
portability rules.
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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.

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