‘1,200 applicants for 2 internships’: CEO warns of ‘demographic disaster’ as India’s job crisis worsens

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The chief executive director of the unmanned dynamics Srinat Malikarjunan has raised an alarm to India’s employment and efficiency crisis, warning that the country goes to “demographic catastrophe”.

Details on LinkedIn Post, Malikarjunan wrote: “I think India has a huge impairment of employment and efficiency, about which the main media is afraid to speak. Our Indian office opened for 2 practices, and there were 1,200 entrants. About 20 of them were shortly listed for further evaluation. ”

He pointed out structural shortcomings in the Indian education system, listing five main problems.

1: Many IIT students stop learning after cracking on gin, making them useless for real jobs.
2. Private colleges and universities cannot provide meaningful education.
3. The graduates of the first generation often earn stairs without gaining real knowledge.
4. Students are unaware that they are misleading due to misleading, ineffective exams and poorly trained teachers.
5. As a result, millions of graduates are only suitable for call center or clerical jobs – roles that will soon replace AI.

“Thus, India does not look at the demographic dividend, but disaster,” he warned.

Malikarjunan advised students to take on their studies, studying the authoritative international books using NPTEL courses and working on independent projects to develop job skills.

His post hit the chord with many specialists who responded to his concerns about the labor market and lacking practical skills among graduates. A user called for professional training in schools, emphasizing that Indian institutions “touch on certificates, but not skills.” One mentioned that applicants competed to post one job, highlighting the scarcity of quality employment.

Malikarjunan, however, rejected the idea that beginners could fix quickly. “Beginners offering fast correction solutions for the broken education system are similar to taking paracetarian for cancer,” he wrote in response to comment.

Another user shared their personal struggle, despite the conducting of a postgraduate and global experience, saying: Our market is guided by foreign investment, and AI will soon automate many of these software works. Without other areas, we are going to crisis.

Malikarjunan is Jabel on India’s investors, arguing that their vision is lacking. “Indian venture investors suffer from impending poverty. They only run Ponzi schemes where the loss is directly proportional to circulation. They have no understanding or stomach for Deep Tech, “he wrote.

 
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