Invisible, informal, and unaccounted
Despite the magnitude, the informal economy seldom features in the GDP estimates of the country. The sector consists of activities operating outside the regulatory framework that potentially add value to tax revenue and GDP but are not completely accounted for. Even though most Indian homes would struggle without the labor of domestic workers, mainly women, there is an appalling gap in data on their numbers and wages. Domestic and other unorganized workers such as construction workers are subjected to the employer's whim.The lack of documentation and registration kept many migrants and other unorganized workers from accessing government relief, and let employers evade their obligation towards workers during the COVID lockdown. The cash-intensive sector was also adversely impacted by demonetization and Good Services Tax.
For years, informality has been calculated as a proxy derived from the formal sector - wherein all the workers and enterprises not part of the formal sector were considered informal. The Indian government has been using the Employees Provident Fund scheme’s data among others as a measure of payroll employment and formal job creation.
Why do MSMEs remain unorganized?
Micro, small and medium enterprises in India contribute over 27 percent to India’s GDP; however, most remain informal. Since businesses in an informal economy do not contribute to the tax base and tend to remain small due to limited access to formal finance, it impairs the country’s ability to gauge the socio-economic metrics truly. Hence, despite the development of robust growth in tax revenue in the country, the true picture of the unorganized sector where most incomes are below taxable limits and exempt from the Goods and Services Tax, is not reflected.Moreover, the formalization of enterprises does not come without costs. Cost of compliance and complex labor laws keep most informal enterprises unregistered or loosely registered. Additionally, low productivity and a lack of competitiveness or capacity to face formal enterprises are some of the reasons hindering the process of formalization.