And, he said, there is a challenge to create a balance in this " turbulent time" of increasing technological intervention and employment generation.
"We must be cognizant of the fact that India is competing or moving on an economic transition in a very-very turbulent time. You have an emerging trend of automation, robotisation, artificial intelligence (AI) on one hand and employment generation on the other. And therefore we need to find some very clever and smart ways of handling this," Kumar said.
There is a need to work together to handle this "acute problem", he said.
Kumar further said: "Young people are off course, are not satisfied with what they have on the ground. Their aspirations are running miles ahead of the ground reality.
"And that is the fact. I don't think that we are suffering from unemployment... perhaps it is not unemployment but underemployment or unsatisfactory employment that may be the real cause of this situation we are facing in our country."
On the MSP scheme announced in Budget 2018-19, under which farmers are slated to get 50 per cent more on their production cost, Kumar said a meeting with all state governments is to be held from February 15-20 to look into the modalities how it has to work.
However, he also said that without proper procurement, MSP (minimum support price) is not as relevant as it should be and government is also thinking about authorising the state governments to do procurement from farmers, which currently is in the hands of the central government.
"We at NITI Aayog are looking to bring farm gates closer to processing centres and it we can bring the agro-processing units closer to farm gates, I think the capacity utilisation can be much better."
Also, there are credit related issues to the agro-processing industry which needs to be paid little more attention, he added.
Replying to a question on China-India economic comparison dating back since 1986 when both the countries had their per capita income at the same level, he said it is futile as both the countries had entirely different approach on their economic fronts.
"So now comparing what China is doing today with its Baidu (Chinese internet technology giant) and so and what we should be doing today, I think it is just in some sense " a historical". So lets reach to where China has reached," Kumar said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
