Urban informal hiring slows even as establishments grow
India’s unincorporated sector added 74.5 lakh workers between 2023-24 and 2025, but urban areas and manufacturing consistently trailed rural and service sectors


India’s unincorporated sector added 74.5 lakh workers and 58.5 lakh establishments between the 2023-24 and 2025 rounds of the Annual Survey of Unincorporated Sector Enterprises (ASUSE), government data shows. Despite a steady increase in the number of establishments, the pace of worker addition is increasingly shifting toward rural areas, while manufacturing continues to lag behind trade and services in both job creation and wage growth.
Manufacturing falls behind
Across sectors, services led worker additions with 34.9 lakh new workers, followed by trade at 27.6 lakh in the same period. Manufacturing added just 12.1 lakh workers—less than half of trade and barely a third of services.
Even the structural composition of the manufacturing sector is shifting away from hired workers. The share of manufacturing establishments that employ hired workers slipped between the two survey periods. While overall in manufacturing, it fell from 11.73 percent to 10.99 percent, the decline was more pronounced in urban areas, where the share dropped from 20.7 percent to 19.21 percent, compared to a marginal dip in rural areas from 5.76 percent to 5.62 percent. The trend suggests that manufacturing units, particularly in urban centres, are becoming less likely to take on paid employees.
Manufacturing lags even in wage dynamics
Compensation trends further highlight the pressure on informal manufacturing. While average annual emoluments in the sector rose 4.4 percent to Rs 1.41 lakh they remain the lowest among the three sectors.
First Published: Mar 26, 2026, 18:56
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