From Disintegrating Selves to Disposable Labour: A Marxist Anatomy of Crisis under Neoliberal Capitalism
—Ramphal Kataria
Abstract
This paper reconstructs the contemporary crisis of youth in India through a continuous, data-grounded narrative that brings together labour statistics (2023–2025), migration trends, and sociological analysis. It argues that the apparent stabilization of unemployment rates conceals a deeper systemic breakdown characterized by precarious labour, educational disillusionment, rising costs of existence, and the fragmentation of subjectivity. The essay situates youth distress within the broader restructuring of neoliberal capitalism, marked by the withdrawal of the state, the commodification of everyday life, and the ideological displacement of economic concerns by identity-driven politics. By incorporating regional dynamics from Haryana and Punjab—including large-scale migration—the paper reveals how the crisis extends beyond national boundaries into a global circuit of precarious labour. It concludes by reimagining “choosing the light” not as individual resilience, but as a collective political act rooted in consciousness, solidarity, and structural transformation.
Keywords
Youth unemployment; precarity; alienation; neoliberalism; migration; informal labour; digital capitalism; social reproduction; identity politics; India
I. The Quiet Violence Beneath Numbers
There is a peculiar calm in the official narrative of employment in India today. Numbers appear reassuring. The unemployment rate hovers near 3.1%, and youth unemployment, though higher, shows signs of moderation. On paper, the storm seems to have passed.
And yet, step outside the statistical frame, and a different reality emerges—one marked not by stability but by quiet disintegration. The crisis has not disappeared; it has merely changed its form. It no longer announces itself through dramatic spikes but settles into everyday life as anxiety, uncertainty, and a slow erosion of hope.
This contradiction becomes visible when we trace the trajectory of youth unemployment:
Table 1: Youth Unemployment Trends in India
Year | Overall Youth Unemployment (%) | Urban Youth (%) | Rural Youth (%) |
2023–24 | ~10.2 | — | — |
2024 | 10.3 | 14.3 | 8.7 |
2025 | 9.9 | 13.6 | 8.3 |
Source: PLFS 2024–25
The decline is real, but its meaning is deceptive. It signals not the resolution of crisis, but its normalization.
The unease sharpens further when we move to regions like Haryana and Punjab—once symbols of agrarian prosperity and upward mobility, now sites of growing youth distress.
Table 1A: Unemployment Rate – Haryana & Punjab (2024–25 Estimates)
State | Unemployment Rate (%) |
Haryana | ~6.0 – 7.0 |
Punjab | ~5.5 – 6.5 |
India | ~3.1 |
Here, the gap between national optimism and regional reality widens into a structural fracture. For youth in these regions, the future is not merely uncertain—it is shrinking.
II. Education and the Manufacture of Broken Dreams
If there is one institution that has shaped the aspirations of Indian youth over the past two decades, it is education. Degrees multiplied, universities expanded, and enrolments surged. Education became the language of hope.
But hope, when repeatedly deferred, turns into disillusionment.
The labour market has not absorbed the expanding pool of educated youth. On the contrary, it has exposed the fragility of the promise itself.
Table 1B: Educated Youth Unemployment (Indicative, 2023–24)
Category | Unemployment Rate (%) |
Graduate youth (India) | ~15–20 |
Graduate youth (Haryana) | ~20+ |
Graduate youth (Punjab) | ~18–20 |
The paradox is devastating: the more one studies, the more uncertain one’s future becomes.
Education, once imagined as liberation, now functions as a speculative investment. Families borrow, sacrifice, and endure, only to find that degrees do not translate into dignity. The failure of the system is internalized as personal inadequacy. This is where the crisis becomes psychological—the slow disintegration of self-worth.
III. Work Without Security, Life Without Anchors
Employment has not disappeared; it has been transformed.
What dominates today is not the absence of work, but the absence of stability. The structure of employment reveals this clearly:
Table 2: Employment Composition in India (2025)
Employment Type | Share (%) |
Self-employed | 56.2 |
Regular salaried | 23.6 |
Casual labour | ~20 |
Secure, long-term employment has become the exception rather than the norm.
In Haryana and Punjab, this transformation takes distinct forms:
Table 2A: Employment Pattern (Haryana & Punjab)
State | Self-employed (%) | Regular Salaried (%) | Casual Labour (%) |
Haryana | ~45–50 | ~30 | ~20–25 |
Punjab | ~55–60 | ~25 | ~15–20 |
In Haryana, contractualization dominates even within formal sectors. In Punjab, agrarian stagnation pushes youth toward unstable self-employment.
The result is a life without anchors. Work exists, but it does not organize life. It does not promise continuity. It does not allow planning. It does not sustain identity.
IV. Migration: Escape, Debt, and the Global Trap
When the local economy closes its doors, the horizon shifts outward.
Migration, particularly in Punjab and increasingly in Haryana, has become the defining aspiration of youth. But aspiration here is inseparable from compulsion.
Table 3: Overseas Migration Trends (Punjab & Haryana Youth)
Indicator | Punjab | Haryana |
Share in India’s student visas | 30–35% | 8–10% |
Annual migration | 2.5–3 lakh | 80,000–1 lakh |
Avg. cost (₹) | 15–30 lakh | 12–25 lakh |
Migration is financed not by surplus, but by sacrifice—land sold, debts incurred, futures mortgaged.
And what awaits abroad?
Not necessarily prosperity, but another layer of precarity.
Low-wage jobs, visa restrictions, cultural isolation, and relentless pressure to repay debt define the migrant experience. The crisis does not end; it travels.
Migration, thus, becomes a global extension of local distress—a circulation of labour within a system that offers movement without security.
V. The Expanding Cost of Existence
If income is unstable, expenditure is relentless.
Life today is saturated with market dependence. To exist socially is to spend continuously:
Smartphones and data for connectivity
Transportation across fragmented geographies
Coaching, exams, certifications
Rent, healthcare, lifestyle consumption
Migration expenses and remittance
A generation ago, many of these were not necessities. Today, they are unavoidable.
This creates a cruel paradox: survival requires money, but money requires stable work—which is precisely what is absent.
VI. Digital Life: Illusion as Survival
In the absence of stable material anchors, youth turn to digital spaces.
Social media offers visibility where society withholds recognition. It creates worlds where success appears immediate, accessible, and aesthetic.
But this is a fragile refuge.
The constant comparison between curated lives and lived realities produces anxiety. The pursuit of validation replaces the pursuit of stability. Identity becomes performative, fragmented, and dependent on external affirmation.
The youth clings to the phone not out of addiction alone, but out of necessity—like a bee to a flower that offers momentary sustenance.
VII. When Survival Turns Illicit
Where formal pathways close, informal and illegal ones open.
In Haryana, proximity to urban economies feeds informal networks. In Punjab, drug economies and migration fraud rackets fill the vacuum left by declining opportunities.
These are not aberrations. They are structural responses.
The shadow economy mirrors the logic of capitalism itself—quick returns, low entry barriers, constant recruitment. It offers what the formal system denies: immediacy.
VIII. The Crisis of Social Life
Economic instability does not remain confined to the workplace; it spills into intimate life.
Marriage is delayed or strained. Relationships become sites of negotiation under scarcity. Gendered violence rises within conditions of stress and insecurity.
Women, in particular, bear a double burden—precarious participation in labour markets alongside unpaid care responsibilities.
This is a crisis of social reproduction: the very fabric that sustains society begins to fray.
IX. Politics Without Material Memory
And yet, amid this profound crisis, public discourse rarely centers these issues.
Instead, politics is saturated with identity—caste alignments, religious polarization, cultural nationalism. Emotional energies are mobilized, but material questions are displaced.
This is not accidental. It is an ideological shift.
The attention of youth is redirected—from unemployment to identity, from economic justice to symbolic assertion. The crisis remains, but its language disappears.
X. Silence, Fragmentation, and the Loss of Collective Voice
Perhaps the most unsettling feature of this moment is silence.
Not the silence of absence, but the silence of fragmentation.
Youth struggle, but alone. Each interprets structural failure as personal defeat. Digital life fragments attention. Competition replaces solidarity.
The result: a society full of suffering, yet devoid of collective articulation.
XI. Choosing the Light: A Politics of Awakening
In such darkness, what does it mean to choose the light?
It is not naïve optimism. It is not withdrawal into spirituality. It is not individual resilience alone.
To choose the light is to see clearly.
To recognize that:
Unemployment is systemic, not personal
Precarity is structural, not accidental
Alienation is produced, not inherent
It is to rebuild solidarity where fragmentation prevails. To reclaim politics as a space of material transformation. To shift attention back to employment, dignity, and justice.
XII. Conclusion: From Rupture to Renewal
The crisis of youth in India is not episodic; it is structural. It reflects a system that produces aspiration without opportunity, movement without security, and identity without stability.
And yet, within this rupture lies possibility.
Disintegration can give rise to consciousness. Consciousness can give rise to solidarity. Solidarity can give rise to transformation.
To choose the light, then, is not to escape reality—but to confront it, collectively.
Footnotes
1. Government of India, Periodic Labour Force Survey Annual Report 2025.
2. National Statistical Office, PLFS 2023–24 Key Indicators.
3. International Labour Organization, India Employment Report 2024.
4. Telecom Regulatory Authority of India, Annual Reports.
5. National Crime Records Bureau, Crime in India Reports.