The Textiles Ministry has written to the Prime Minister seeking the sector's linkage to the employment guarantee scheme, saying that it will help attract workers to the industry that is facing shortage of skilled manpower.
Linking the programme with the sector under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act will help train about 15 lakh workers in the next three years, it said.
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, launched in 2006, guarantees 100-day employment to the poor in rural areas every year.
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The principle aim of Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act is to provide employment to people who do not get jobs during the off-season periods, he said, adding that linking the scheme to textiles sector would give these people employment and training.
"We want to train 15 lakh people in the textiles sector in the next three years which will help in making textiles exports globally competitive," he said.
The government has already allocated Rs 1,900 crore for skills development in the sector and some funds from the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act scheme will help to provide training to people, along with paying them wages, he added.
Rao said he had also written to Rural Development Minister Jairam Ramesh, suggesting to him the merging of the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act scheme with skill development.
"I wrote to Jairam Ramesh," he said, adding that he did not agree to it. At present, about 45 million workers are employed in the textiles sector.
During 2012-13, the country's textiles exports stood at $34 billion. For the current fiscal, the government has set an export target of about $43 billion. The US and Europe together account for almost 65 per cent of India's textiles exports.