According to some textile representative bodies, the current labour shortage can partly be attributed to migrant workers returning to their native places on the occasion of Dussehra and Diwali. This, they said, was a seasonal phenomenon.
The data compiled by the Confederation of Indian Textile Industry shows around 100 million people are employed in the Indian textile industry, directly or indirectly, across the country
“Typically every year, labourers take three-four months of leave around October and return a month or two after Diwali. The industry prepares for the workers’ shortage months in advance or extend their delivery schedule to meet the labour shortage. This year, however, the impact is wider due to mass return of migrant workers,” said Siddharth Rajagopal, executive director, the Cotton Textiles Export Promotion Council of India (Texprocil).