Tuesday, 27 January 2026

When Degrees Are Not Enough

 By Kalpana Sahoo

Educated Youth, Job Scarcity, and Ecological Instability in Contemporary India

India today stands at a paradoxical crossroads. On one side is a young, educated population—the largest cohort of degree-holders the country has ever produced. On the other side is a shrinking landscape of stable employment, ecological uncertainty, and deepening inequality. Between these two realities lies a generation suspended between degrees and despair.

For millions of young Indians, education was meant to be the bridge out of poverty and insecurity. Yet climate change, economic inequality, rural distress, and job scarcity have combined to turn that promise fragile. Degrees no longer guarantee dignity. Ecological instability now shapes not only the economy but also the psychology, aspirations, and everyday lives of the youth.

 

The Promise of Education—and Its Fracture

Post-independence India invested deeply in education as a tool of social mobility. Families across villages and towns sacrificed land, savings, and labour to educate their children. A degree symbolized hope—of a government job, urban stability, and upward mobility.

Today, however, educated unemployment is rising. Many graduates work in informal, low-paid, or temporary jobs unrelated to their training. Others remain unemployed for years, preparing for competitive exams with uncertain outcomes.

This mismatch between aspiration and opportunity creates emotional distress, eroding faith in both education and institutions.

 

Climate Change and the Shrinking Job Landscape

Climate change intensifies this crisis in subtle but powerful ways.

Extreme heat reduces productivity in construction, manufacturing, and transport

Floods and cyclones disrupt supply chains and small businesses

Droughts weaken agriculture-linked industries

Environmental degradation discourages private investment in vulnerable regions

Sectors that traditionally absorbed semi-skilled and educated youth—agriculture, MSMEs, tourism, fisheries—are increasingly climate-unstable.

Thus, ecological instability directly translates into economic insecurity for young people.

 

Inequality: Unequal Degrees, Unequal Outcomes

Not all degrees carry equal weight. Youth from privileged backgrounds often have:

Better institutions

English proficiency

Networks and financial buffers

For first-generation learners from rural or marginalized communities, a degree is often their only asset.

When jobs disappear, inequality sharpens:

Some youth wait and reskill

Others fall into long-term unemployment or precarious work

Climate change magnifies this inequality by hitting vulnerable regions harder—tribal belts, coastal areas, drought-prone districts.

 

Rural Distress and the Collapse of the Safety Net

For rural educated youth, the crisis is double-edged.

Agriculture, once a fallback option, is increasingly unviable due to erratic rainfall, rising input costs, and repeated crop failures. At the same time, non-farm rural employment remains limited.

Field Story: A Graduate from Bundelkhand

“I have a BA degree, but no job,” says Ankit (24). “Farming fails, cities reject us, and staying home feels like defeat.”

Migration to cities offers no guarantee. Many graduates end up as delivery workers, sales assistants, or gig labourers—jobs vulnerable to heatwaves, floods, and economic shocks.

Degrees lose their social value, leading to shame and frustration.

 

Everyday Life Between Degrees and Despair

This crisis reshapes daily routines and life choices:

Delayed marriages due to financial insecurity

Extended dependence on parents

Mental health stress and self-doubt

Growing exam-preparation culture with diminishing returns

Climate disruptions add another layer—power cuts during heatwaves, floods delaying exams, health impacts affecting productivity.

For many, despair is not dramatic—it is quiet, constant, and exhausting.

 

Human Story: The Coaching Room Generation

In towns like Prayagraj, Patna, and Jaipur, thousands of educated youth spend years preparing for competitive exams.

“We study not because we love the job, but because it feels safe,” says Pooja (26), preparing for state services.

 “Private jobs disappear after floods or layoffs. Government jobs feel climate-proof.”

Yet success rates are low. Repeated failure fuels anxiety, depression, and self-blame—often without adequate mental health support.

 

Youth Psychology in an Age of Uncertainty

Climate change and job scarcity together shape a new youth psychology:

Fear of long-term planning

Reduced risk-taking and innovation

Preference for ‘secure’ but scarce jobs

Climate anxiety mixed with economic anxiety

Many young people hesitate to pursue careers in agriculture, ecology, or rural development despite passion—because these fields are seen as unstable and underpaid.

Thus, ecological crisis discourages the very human capital needed to solve it.

 

Poem: Between Degrees and Despair

We framed our degrees on hopeful walls,

 Believed they’d answer hunger’s calls.

 But floods erased the factory gate,

 And heatwaves burned the interview date.

They told us “work hard, you’ll be free,”

 But freedom needs stability.

 Between the job we seek, the land laid bare,

 We hold our dreams—thin as air.

 

From Awareness to Action: Youth Responses

Despite despair, youth are not passive victims.

Across India, educated youth are:

Building climate startups

Working in renewable energy

Engaging in climate journalism

Joining grassroots adaptation projects

Example: Green Skill Pathways

Training programmes in solar installation, water management, waste recycling, and sustainable agriculture are creating alternative employment pathways.

Awareness of climate–employment links is growing in universities and student movements.

 

Student Reflections: Rethinking Success

“Success cannot only mean a desk job. It must mean resilience.”

 — Environmental studies student, Kerala

“Climate change taught me that jobs must serve society, not just salaries.”

 — Engineering graduate, Rajasthan

Such reflections indicate a slow but meaningful shift in values.

 

Policy Gaps and Structural Challenges

India’s youth crisis cannot be solved by education alone. It requires systemic reform:

Align education with climate-resilient employment

Expand green jobs in renewable energy, conservation, and climate services

Strengthen rural non-farm economies

Integrate mental health support for unemployed youth

Address inequality through region-specific development

Without addressing ecological instability, employment policies will remain incomplete.

 

Hope as a Collective Project

Hope does not lie in denying reality. It lies in:

Recognizing climate change as an economic issue

Designing inclusive job pathways

Empowering youth as problem-solvers, not victims

India’s educated youth are not lacking talent—they are lacking opportunity in a stable environment.

 

Conclusion

Between degrees and despair lies the story of a generation navigating economic uncertainty and ecological instability. Climate change, inequality, rural distress, and job scarcity together shape not only livelihoods but identities and mental health.

Yet within this crisis lies potential. If education is aligned with climate action, if youth are supported with skills, dignity, and purpose, despair can give way to direction.

The challenge is not that India has too many educated youth.

 The challenge is whether India can build a future stable enough for them to belong.

 

References

IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6)

ILO – Global Employment Trends for Youth

NITI Aayog – India Climate Vulnerability Assessment

World Bank – Climate Change and Jobs

Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE) – Employment Data

Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship, Government of India

UNDP – Youth, Employment, and Climate Change


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When Degrees Are Not Enough