# Does India really have the biggest jobs challenge in the world?

> Projections show about 238 million young Indians will reach working age by 2035, more than any other developing economy.

**India really has the biggest jobs challenge in the developing world**

India faces the largest absolute wave of new workers among developing economies, with about 238 million projected to reach working age by 2035, according to a new World Bank report. That is roughly one in five of the entire developing world's youth pipeline, and it surpasses the totals of many whole regions. Yet these numbers are demographic projections, not counts of the unemployed. India's youth population has already stopped growing, and whether the economy needs 60 million or 148 million new jobs by 2030 hinges largely on labour-force participation, above all whether more women enter the workforce. The headline is sobering, but the fine print restores proportion: India's challenge is one of sheer scale, not unique youthfulness, and the window is already beginning to close.

## Does India have the biggest youth workforce challenge among developing economies?

Yes. About 238 million people are projected to reach working age (15-24) in India between 2025 and 2035, the highest of any developing economy. Next is China with about 169 million, then Nigeria (61 million), Pakistan (59 million), and Indonesia (47 million). This is the 'youth method' from a new World Bank study, and it counts the young arriving, not the unemployed. India's lead comes from its enormous population, not a unique youth bulge. The countries with the highest share of young people, like the Central African Republic and Niger, are far smaller. So the size of the task is staggering, but the intensity is not.

> India alone accounts for about 238 million of them, close to one in five of the developing world's total.

## Is India's challenge comparable to that of entire regions?

Yes, India's pipeline rivals multi-country regions. The developing world as a whole has a massive youth pipeline; India's 238 million is roughly one in five of it. India alone accounts for about 86% of all South Asia (278 million) and around 72% of Sub-Saharan Africa (332 million). It surpasses the entire Middle East and North Africa (170 million), Latin America and the Caribbean (99 million), and Europe and Central Asia (65 million). So when we say India faces the biggest jobs challenge, we are comparing one country to whole regions.

## Does India still lead when we look at the whole working-age population over a longer period?

Yes. Switching to a broader measure, the net increase in people aged 15 to 64, all potential workers, not just the young, India adds about 132 million between 2025 and 2050. That is more than Nigeria (about 98 million), Pakistan (89 million), the Democratic Republic of Congo (72 million), and Ethiopia (67 million). Over the shorter 2025-35 window, the net increase is about 91 million, more than twice Nigeria's 40 million. The three methods the report uses give different absolute numbers globally, roughly 270 million, 447 million, or 1.23 billion depending on the method, but India consistently ranks first. The lead is not a statistical quirk.

## Is India's youth population still growing?

Surprisingly, no. The growth rate of India's 15-24 population has already turned negative. It peaked at 2.2% a year around 2000 and crossed below zero about 2021. Projections show it falling further to about -0.8% by 2040. This means the number of young people is no longer getting bigger. The wave of new entrants has crested. Yet the absolute number remains the largest on earth for years, so the economy must still absorb a massive cohort. Think of a high tide that has stopped rising but hasn't yet receded.

## What about the broader working-age population?

The working-age group (15-64) tells the same story, just later. Its annual growth rate peaked at 2.5% in 2000 and declines steadily, turning slightly negative around 2050 at -0.1%. That is far in the future, and the actual number of working-age people will keep expanding until then, but the engine is slowing. By mid-century, India's labour pool will stop growing. This is the closing of the demographic window, still open, but narrowing.

## How does India's overall population compare to China's?

India is now the world's most populous country, overtaking China around 2022-23. According to projections, India's population will continue rising until about 2060 before gently declining, while China's is already shrinking. In 1990, China had 1.15 billion people to India's 0.87 billion; by 2100, those numbers are projected to be 0.63 billion and 1.51 billion. Population is the ceiling for the workforce, not the workforce itself. The challenge is to turn demographic heft into productive employment, not just to count bodies.

## What determines whether the jobs gap is 60 million or 148 million?

A study from the IMF (Alonso and MacDonald 2024) cited in the World Bank report shows a stark sensitivity. If India's labour-force participation rate stays flat, the country would need about 60 million new jobs by 2030. But if participation rises toward a target rate, which largely means more women joining the workforce, the number jumps to 148 million. By 2050, the range widens from 143 million to 324 million. These scenarios are not forecasts; they illustrate an important lever. The demographic numbers set the stage, but it is participation, above all of women, that writes the script.

> Whether India needs 60 million or 148 million new jobs by 2030 hinges on one lever above all: labour-force participation, which in India means whether more women enter the workforce.

## How should you read these numbers?

This page is built almost entirely on one source: the World Bank's The Global Jobs Challenge (2026 advance edition), edited by Tommy Chrimes, M. Ayhan Kose and Kersten Stamm, using UN World Population Prospects 2024. The 60-148 million range comes from an IMF study the report cites. Every number here is a demographic projection, based on assumptions about births, deaths, and migration, not a measurement of current unemployment. The three counting methods (youth, working-age, ratio) produce very different global totals, so the ranking is more reliable than any single figure. The 'jobs challenge' counts young people reaching working age, not the unemployed. And this page deliberately does not include India's own labour-force or female participation rates because the source does not cover them. Use these numbers to grasp the scale and the direction of the task, not as precise job targets.

## Sources

- Source: World Bank, The Global Jobs Challenge (2026 advance edition); population data from UN World Population Prospects 2024.
- The 60-148 million range is from IMF (Alonso and MacDonald 2024), cited in the World Bank report.

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Source: [This Indian Life](https://thisindianlife.today/articles/india-jobs-challenge/) · Updated 2026-06-27. Licensed CC BY 4.0. Please cite as "This Indian Life — https://thisindianlife.today".
