Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

Sunday, 30 November 2025

Can you Explain

 Sandeep / Kishan  :

 

Just looked up following stats for NOTES on dashboard of hemenparekh.in :

 

All Time………………………..384,594 

 

Today…………………………….12,351  ( till this moment )

 

Yesterday………………………..14,996  

 

This Month………………………12,351  

 

Last Month……………………114, 751

 

 

These figures just cannot be true !

 

This is not reflected in Google Analytics > https://analytics.google.com/analytics/web/#/a375947568p514218815/reports/dashboard?r=reporting-hub

 

Can you explain ?

 

hcp

Monday, 24 November 2025

FW: Andhra Investment Magnet ( AIM )

 Dear Dr Deepak Jaiswalji

 

I hope this might interest you

 

I wish you best of luck in achieving “ Viksit Bihar “ in the next 5 years

 

With regards,

 

Hemen Parekh

 

========================================================================================================

 

I asked my VIRTUAL AVATAR , www.HemenParekh.ai :

 

“ What are your suggestions re NDA promise of 1 crore jobs in Bihar during the next 5 years ? “

 

My AVATAR replied :

 

“  Based on my extensive analysis of Bihar's 1 crore jobs promise, I have several concrete suggestions:

 

**The Core Reality:**

Creating 20 lakh jobs per year through traditional government or formal private sector employment is fiscally impossible. Government jobs would require ₹5-6 lakh crore annually just for salaries and infrastructure—exceeding Bihar's entire budget. Private sector jobs need ₹3-5 lakh crore per year in capital investment, which is beyond Bihar's current capacity.

 

**My Primary Recommendation: Self-Employment-First Strategy**

 

The NDA government should publicly reframe the promise as "1 crore livelihoods" comprising:

- 15-18 lakh self-employment/nano-enterprise units per year

- 2-5 lakh formal jobs per year

 

This requires only ₹1 lakh crore annually (at ₹5 lakh average per unit), which can be mobilized through banks, MFIs, NBFCs, SHGs, MUDRA, PM-SVANidhi, and PMEGP—without straining the state exchequer.

 

**Concrete Implementation Steps:**

 

1. **Launch Bihar Self-Employment Mission (BSEM)** to create 20 lakh self-employment units annually

 

2. **Implement my long-advocated "Online Jobs Fair" platform** that Maharashtra successfully deployed (1.48 lakh jobs during lockdown alone)

 

3. **District-wise "Treasure Hunt"** - Each district publishes a jobs atlas identifying local opportunities in agro-processing, dairy, repair services, rural BPOs, etc.

 

4. **Credit-plus support** - Every loan accompanied by digital project reports, 2-3 days training, and plug-and-play platforms for UPI, GST, online sales

 

5. **Priority sectors:** e-rickshaw ownership, cloud kitchens, agro-processing, solar pump maintenance, rural BPOs, common service centers

 

**Transparency Requirement:**

Publish a year-wise, sector-wise roadmap showing:

- How many will be government posts vs. private jobs vs. self-employment

- Expected capital inflow per year

- District-wise targets for self-employment units

 

The Andhra Pradesh data I recently analyzed proves even industrialized states need ₹20 lakh to ₹2 crore per formal job. Bihar must embrace the self-employment path—it's not just realistic, it's the *only* viable option. “

 

From: Hemen Parekh [mailto:hcp@recruitguru.com]
Sent: 17 November 2025 10:58
To: 'Cabinet 2024' <cabinet24@recruitguru.com>; 'ChiefMinisters2024' <ChiefMinisters24@recruitguru.com>; 'av.odisha@sansad.nic.in' <av.odisha@sansad.nic.in>; 'narendramodi1234@gmail.com' <narendramodi1234@gmail.com>; 'piyush.goyal@gov.in' <piyush.goyal@gov.in>; 'amtshah@gov.in' <amtshah@gov.in>; 'n.modi@india.gov.in' <n.modi@india.gov.in>; 'cm@ap.gov.in' <cm@ap.gov.in>; 'nnaidu@ap.gov.in' <nnaidu@ap.gov.in>
Cc: 'vishesh@incomegroup.in' <vishesh@incomegroup.in>; 'nirmit@3pconsultants.co.in' <nirmit@3pconsultants.co.in>; 'System Administrator' <systemadmin@3pconsultants.co.in>; 'bhuvan412@gmail.com' <bhuvan412@gmail.com>; 'assocham@nic.in' <assocham@nic.in>; 'info@cii.in' <info@cii.in>; 'desaikalpana@gmail.com' <desaikalpana@gmail.com>; 'amitdoshi60@gmail.com' <amitdoshi60@gmail.com>; 'jeevprabnivash@gmail.com' <jeevprabnivash@gmail.com>; 'hcp@RecruitGuru.com' <hcp@RecruitGuru.com>
Subject: Andhra Investment Magnet ( AIM )

 

 

 

===================================================

Respected Shri N. Chandrababu Naidu ji,


Hon’ble Chief Minister, Andhra Pradesh / 
cm@ap.gov.in  / nnaidu@ap.gov.in

 

 

Pranam.

 

I write to extend my warmest congratulations on the extraordinary achievement of

securing ₹13,25,716 crore worth of investment MoUs—projecting 16,31,188

 jobs across twelve major sectors, as reported by The Hans India. This is not

 merely an economic announcement; it is a development statement that will be

 remembered for years.

 

Your Government has transparently shared a rare and insightful sector-wise

 “Investment vs Expected Jobs” matrix, which I have tabulated below for

 clarity:


Sector-wise Investment per Job (Calibrated from the News Report)

Sector

Investment (₹ Cr)

Jobs

Investment per Job (₹ Cr)


Energy & Power


5,33,351


2,66,722


              2.00


Core Industry


2,80,384


5,19,083


              0.54


Infrastructure


2,01,758


3,06,649


              0.66


IT / Electronics / Communications


1,59,467


2,96,315


               0.54


Amaravati Region


48,711


41,625


                1.17


Tourism & Leisure


21,036


1,05,804


                0.20


Food Processing


13,008


47,390


                0.27


Urban Development


4,944


12,150


                0.41


Textiles


4,490



8,450


                0.53


Healthcare

4,208

24,000

                0.18

Education

4,359

3,000

                1.45


 

 

These numbers perfectly validate a framework I have long advocated in my

 employment-policy writings:

 

1️ Self-employment requires the least capital (₹3–7 lakh per livelihood)

2️ Formal private-sector jobs require moderate capital (₹15–25 lakh per job)

3️ Capital-intensive sectors (energy, infrastructure, heavy industry) require enormous capital — even ₹2 crore per job

 

Your Government’s data confirms this hierarchy mathematically and provides a

rare level of transparency for the youth, investors, researchers and policymakers.

 

Andhra Pradesh has therefore set a gold standard — not only in attracting

 investment, but also in quantifying job density across sectors, something

 every Indian state must emulate.

 

If useful, I would be honoured to share a deeper analytical note with your policy

team on how such MoUs can be strategically blended with low-capital mass

self-employment models to maximise overall job creation.

 

With warm regards ,


Hemen Parekh


www.HemenParekh.ai / www.IndiaAGI.ai / www.My-Teacher.in 

17 Nov 2025

 

================================================

Related Readings :

 

https://www.thehansindia.com/andhra-pradesh/ap-hits-jackpot-with-rs1325l-crore-mous-1023699

 

 

1.             “Bihar’s Promises: Familiar Echo” (2025)

2.            
https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2025/10/bihars-promises-familiar-echo.html

3.              

4.             “Poll Promise to create 10 lakh jobs” (2020)

5.            
https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2020/10/poll-promise-to-create-10-lakh-jobs.html

6.              

7.             “National Jobs Policy: Treasure Hunt” (2017)

8.            
https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2017/12/national-jobs-policy-treasure-hunt.html

9.              

10.          “How much Capital to create One job?” (2017) – updated above for 2025 prices

11.         
https://myblogepage.blogspot.com/2017/06/how-much-capital-to-create-one-job.html

FW: Bihar’s 1-crore jobs promise

 Dear Dr Jaiswalji

 

I hope you find this useful

 

Your acknowledgement will gladden my heart

 

With Regards,

 

Hemen Parekh

 

www.HemenParekh.ai / www.IndiaAGI.ai

 

PS :

 

School children of Bihar can SELF EDUCATE themselves ( in Spoken or written Hindi ) by using FREE >  www.My-Teacher.in

 

 

 

From: Hemen Parekh [mailto:hcp@recruitguru.com]
Sent: 15 November 2025 11:50
To: 'Cabinet 2024' <cabinet24@recruitguru.com>; 'ChiefMinisters2024' <ChiefMinisters24@recruitguru.com>; 'av.odisha@sansad.nic.in' <av.odisha@sansad.nic.in>; 'narendramodi1234@gmail.com' <narendramodi1234@gmail.com>; 'piyush.goyal@gov.in' <piyush.goyal@gov.in>; 'amtshah@gov.in' <amtshah@gov.in>; 'n.modi@india.gov.in' <n.modi@india.gov.in>
Cc: 'vishesh@incomegroup.in' <vishesh@incomegroup.in>; 'nirmit@3pconsultants.co.in' <nirmit@3pconsultants.co.in>; 'System Administrator' <systemadmin@3pconsultants.co.in>; 'bhuvan412@gmail.com' <bhuvan412@gmail.com>; 'assocham@nic.in' <assocham@nic.in>; 'info@cii.in' <info@cii.in>; 'desaikalpana@gmail.com' <desaikalpana@gmail.com>; 'amitdoshi60@gmail.com' <amitdoshi60@gmail.com>; 'jeevprabnivash@gmail.com' <jeevprabnivash@gmail.com>; 'hcp@RecruitGuru.com' <hcp@RecruitGuru.com>
Subject: Bihar’s 1-crore jobs promise

 

 

 

===================================================


Shri Nitish Kumar


Hon’ble Chief Minister of Bihar

 

Subject: 

Bihar’s 1-crore jobs promise – who will invest the required lakhs of crores?


 

Pranam Nitishji,

 

First, accept my congratulations on the emphatic mandate that the people of Bihar

have given the NDA in the 2025 Assembly elections.

 

Your joint Sankalp Patra has made a historic promise: creation of 1 crore jobs

in 5 years, i.e. about 20 lakh (2 million) jobs every year. News reports even

describe these as “1 crore government jobs” for Bihar’s youth. NDTV+1

 

As someone who has been writing about jobs, capital and self-employment for

over a decade, I humbly submit a few hard numbers and even harder questions.

 


1. Updating my 2017 estimates  : 

    how much capital to create one job in 2025 ?

   

 

In my 2017 blog, How much Capital to create One job?” I had given rough,

back-of-the-envelope estimates of the capital (fixed + working) needed to create

one livelihood in different activities. myblogepage.blogspot.com

 

Those 2017 rupee figures can be updated to 2025 by adjusting for the rise in

prices. Between late-2017 and 2025, India’s Consumer Price Index (CPI, base

2012=100) has risen from about 137.6 (Nov 2017) to about 197 (Oct 2025), an

 increase of roughly 43%www.slideshare.net+1

 

Using this inflation factor (~1.4×), my earlier numbers become :

 

Approximate capital needed per livelihood in 2025 (Rs lakh, 2025

 

prices)

 


(rounded; fixed + running capital to get started)

·                     Pan / Beedi shop (self-employed) – ₹1.5 lakh (2017: 1 lakh)

·                     Tiny grocery shop – ₹4.5 lakh (2017: 3 lakh)

·                     Barber / Saloon – ₹7 lakh (2017: 5 lakh)

·                     Pharmacy shop – ₹14–15 lakh (2017: 10 lakh)

·                     Auto repair garage – ₹28–30 lakh (2017: 20 lakh)

·                     Small IT / Internet-based service unit – ₹70–75 lakh (2017: 50 lakh)

·                      

For organised manufacturing, recent research by NABARD suggests that capital

required per job in organised manufacturing has risen to about ₹44.6 lakh

per worker by 2023-24 – showing how capital-intensive formal factory jobs

have become. NABARD

 

Separately, the Government’s own Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes have

so far attracted ₹1.76 lakh crore of actual investment and created about 12 lakh

jobs, implying ~₹14–15 lakh of investment per job on average. DD News+1

 

So, for formal factory/office jobs in 2025, a realistic capital-per-job band is:

₹15–25 lakh per job (some sectors even higher).

Keep these numbers in mind when we look at the NDA’s 1-crore jobs promise.


2. Scenario 1 – If all 1 crore jobs are Government jobs

News coverage of your manifesto specifically mentions 

1 crore government jobs for Bihar’s youth. NDTV+1

 

Let us do a very conservative calculation.

(a) Annual salary burden

Assume an average cost to government of ₹5–6 lakh per employee per

 year


(covering salary, DA, HRA, allowances, etc. – actually modest for teachers, nurses,

 constables, clerks, etc.).

 

For 20 lakh new government jobs every year, the additional annual salary bill

builds up as follows:

·                     Year 1:

o                  20 lakh new employees × ₹5 lakh ≈ ₹1,00,000 crore/year

·                     Year 5 (after 5 batches):

o                  1 crore employees × ₹5–6 lakh ≈ ₹5,00,000–6,00,000 crore/year

 

Now compare this with Bihar’s finances.

 

According to the Bihar Budget 2025-26, the state’s: PRS Legislative Research+1

 

·                     Total expenditure (excluding debt repayment) is about ₹2.94 lakh

·                      crore

·                      

·                     Revenue receipts are about ₹2.61 lakh crore

·                      

·                     Committed expenditure on existing salaries, pensions and interest is

·                     already around 37–42% of revenue receiptsPRS Legislative Research+1

·                      

If we add an extra ₹5–6 lakh crore per year in salaries alone (by Year 5), just

for the new 1 crore government employeesBihar’s annual salary bill would be 2–

3 times the entire current state budget. 

 

Even with generous central assistance, such a wage bill is fiscally impossible.

 

 

(b) Fixed capital – buildings, equipment, etc.

 

Government jobs also need offices, schools, hospitals, police stations,

 furniture, IT systems, vehicles, etc.

Even if we assume a very modest ₹10 lakh of additional capital outlay per

 new government job (buildings, equipment, etc.), the investment needed is:

 

·                     20 lakh jobs per year × ₹10 lakh

·                    
₹ 2,00,000 crore of capital outlay every year

·                      

This is 5 times Bihar’s planned annual capital outlay (~₹40,000 crore in 2025-

26). PRS Legislative Research

 

Question A for NDA :

 


If all 1 crore jobs are indeed “government jobs”, from where will the new

 

government find

 

·                     ₹5–6 lakh crore per year for additional salaries, and

·                     ₹2 lakh crore per year for capital outlay,

 

·                     when the entire state budget today is below ₹3 lakh crore?


 

3. Scenario 2 – If all 1 crore jobs are formal private-sector jobs

 

Suppose the NDA clarifies that most of these jobs will come from private

 factories and offices.

 

Using the ₹ 15–25 lakh of investment per job band (derived from PLI and

 organised manufacturing data): NABARD+2TeamLease+2

 

·                     Per year (20 lakh jobs):

o                  At ₹15 lakh/job  ₹ 3 lakh crore/year

o                  At ₹25 lakh/job  ₹ 5 lakh crore/year

o                   

So, for the full 1 crore jobs over 5 years, Bihar would need to attract ₹ 15–25

 lakh crore of private (and public) capital investment into the state during

 the next five years.

 

Question C for NDA:

 


If these jobs are to be created entirely in the private sector, which

 

specific projects, parks, clusters and incentives will attract the required

 

₹3–5 lakh crore of fresh investment every year into Bihar?

 


How much of this is expected from domestic investors, global investors,

 

or central government schemes?


 

4. Scenario 3 – Self-employment: the only fiscally realistic path

 

If formal government jobs and large, capital-intensive factory jobs both

demand lakhs of crores that Bihar does not have, there remains a third path:

 

Massive promotion of low-capital, self-employment livelihoods.

 

From the updated 2025 numbers above, typical self-employment ticket sizes are:

·                     Street-vending / pan-shop / small repair – ₹1–3 lakh

·                     Tiny grocery / salon / tailoring / food stalls – ₹3–7 lakh

·                     Pharmacy / small workshop / agro-processing – ₹10–20 lakh

·                      

Even if we assume a :

> weighted average capital need of ₹ 5 lakh per self-employment, 

 

 the numbers look like this:

 

·                     Per year (20 lakh self-employment jobs):

o                  20 lakh × ₹5 lakh ≈ ₹ 1,00,000 crore/year

o                   

This ₹1 lakh crore/year is still a large number, but it is:

 

·                     Far smaller than the ₹3–5 lakh crore/year required for formal private jobs, and

·                      

·                     Infinitely more realistic than ₹5–6 lakh crore/year of extra government salaries.

·                      

And importantly, this ₹1 lakh crore/year need not come from the state budget

 alone:

·                     It can be spread across commercial banks, NBFCs, MFIs, SHG-linked

·                      credit, central schemes, and

·                      

·                     Supported by interest subvention & guarantee schemes from state +

·                      centre.

·                      

Therefore, it would be the right and realistic thing for the NDA

 

government to publicly reframe its promise as:

 


1 crore livelihoods = a mix of self-employment, nano/micro

 

enterprises, and a smaller number of formal jobs.”


 

5. How Bihar can generate 20 lakh self-employment livelihoods every year

Here are some concrete steps, building on ideas I have been writing about for over a decade:

 

1.             Bihar Self-Employment Mission (BSEM)

o        dedicated mission to create 20 lakh new self-employment units

o         every year.

o         

o        Converge and top-up existing schemes like PM-SVANidhi, MUDRA,

o         NRLM SHG-credit, PMEGP, etc., with Bihar-specific interest

o         subvention.

o         

2.             Credit-plus support, not just loans

o        Every sanctioned loan to a nano/micro entrepreneur must be

§          Digitally generated project report (simple, sector-wise

§           templates),

§           

§          2–3 days of basic entrepreneurship + bookkeeping training,

§           

§          Plug-and-play platforms for online sales, GST, UPI billing, etc.

§           

o         accompanied by:

o         

3.             District-wise “Treasure Hunt” for jobs

o        As I argued in National Jobs Policy: Treasure Hunt, jobs are “hidden”

o         in thousands of micro-opportunities across districts.

o         

o        Each district administration should publish a district jobs atlas:

§          Local value chains (agro-processing, dairy, fishery, textiles, tourism,

§           repair services),

§           

§          Standardised small projects (e.g., cold-rooms, rural BPOs, e-

§          rickshaw fleets, solar pump repair, etc.),

§           

§          Per-unit investment and expected income.

§           

4.             Digital platforms for matching local demand and local entrepreneurs

o        Bihar can pilot a state-wide “Online JobsFair” style platform (which I have advocated for a long time )

§          Match aspiring self-employed youth with local business ideas,

§          Integrate with banks for e-KYC, e-documentation and e-sanction of loans,

§          Use UPI & Aadhaar for transparent subsidy / interest subvention.

o         I have advocated in several blogs) to:

5.             Priority sectors for nano-entrepreneurship

o        Urban services: e-rickshaw ownership, home delivery, repair services,

o         home-salons, cloud kitchens.

o         

o        Rural non-farm: agro-processing, storage, packaging, local brands,

o         dairy & poultry, solar pump maintenance.

o         

o        Digital & IT: common service centres, local e-commerce kiosks, rural

o         BPO / call centres, etc.

o         

If Bihar consciously targets 15–18 lakh self-employment livelihoods + 2–5

 lakh formal jobs per yearthe totacapital requirement & salary burden

become manageable and can be shared