India currently develops modifications to the Emigration Act of 1983 to achieve better compliance with global workforce requirements as well as enhanced support for legal migration, but decreased support for undocumented human movement. S. Jaishankar emphasised these plans on Tuesday as the government works to allow Indian workers to grow their international productivity. The External Affairs Minister, S. Jaishankar, delivered his comments at the GATI Foundation’s launch ceremony, which aims to enhance Indian workers’ skills and employability.
Jaishankar stated that India had historically failed to properly employ its workforce and viewed the Emigration Act revisions as a system-wide response to adapt to changing workforce demands in an international context. National defence power increases along with workforce strength and societal peace through the combined effort of promoting lawful migration alongside illegal practice elimination. Jaishankar clarified that this approach provides professional training combined with basic skills development so participants become ready for global workplace situations.
The Indian government takes support measures for citizens who work abroad beyond amending the Emigration Act. The government runs vocational education programs and workforce training along with career development programs to prepare workers to become successful at an international level, according to Jaishankar. The government established multi-dimensional protective systems, including financial support networks and grievance reporting systems, to assist Indian citizens when they need help abroad. As part of their extensive policy, the government implemented grievance portals while creating a responsive fund to protect abroad-living vulnerable citizens.
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