What Happened
- The Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship (MSDE) reported that Pradhan Mantri Kaushal Vikas Yojana (PMKVY) has trained 1.64 crore candidates from 2015 to 31 December 2025, with 1.29 crore receiving formal certification
- 94% of surveyed employers expressed willingness to hire PMKVY-trained candidates; 52% of candidates trained under Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) reported receiving higher salaries than uncertified peers
- PMKVY 1.0–3.0 achieved a 42.8% placement rate in Short-Term Training (STT) across earlier phases
- PMKVY 4.0 (from 2022–23) enrolled 28.19 lakh candidates with emphasis on new-age skills (AI, ML, AR/VR, green economy, 5G) and integration with the Skill India Digital Hub (SIDH)
- The scheme now operates through a hub and spoke model with industry-led Special Purpose Vehicles under PM-SETU
Static Topic Bridges
PMKVY — Architecture and Evolution
PMKVY is the flagship skill development scheme of the Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship. Launched in 2015, it has gone through four iterations: PMKVY 1.0 (2015–16), 2.0 (2016–20), 3.0 (2020–21), and 4.0 (2022–26). It funds short-term skill training through National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC)-empanelled training partners. Courses are aligned with the National Skills Qualifications Framework (NSQF) — a 10-level competency framework. The Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) component certifies informally acquired skills of existing workers.
- PMKVY launched: 2015; nodal ministry: MSDE; implementing agency: NSDC
- NSQF: 10-level framework; all PMKVY courses mapped to NSQF levels 1–4 (entry to semi-skilled)
- Short-Term Training (STT): 3–6 months duration; sector-specific skills; assessed and certified by Sector Skill Councils (SSCs)
- Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL): validates existing skills of informally trained workers; connects them to formal certification
- Skill India Digital Hub (SIDH): digital platform for PMKVY 4.0; integrates skilling, employment, and entrepreneurship; launched under PMKVY 4.0
Connection to this news: The 10-year assessment of PMKVY shows significant scale (1.64 crore trained) but also persistent gaps in placement quality, wage premium, and coverage of unorganised sector workers — the transition to PMKVY 4.0's digital and industry-linked model seeks to address these gaps.
National Skills Development Mission — Policy Framework
India's skill development policy is anchored in the National Skills Development Mission, adopted in 2015 by the Cabinet. The Mission has seven sub-missions including institutional training, infrastructure development, convergence, training of trainers, overseas employment, sustainable livelihoods, and leveraging public infrastructure. The India Skills Report 2024 found that employability of the trained workforce has steadily improved. The National Education Policy 2020 mandates 50% gross enrolment in vocational education by 2025.
- Ministry of Skill Development and Entrepreneurship: established 2014 (first dedicated Ministry for skills)
- National Skill Development Corporation (NSDC): established 2008–09; PPP model; majority private ownership (51%) + Government (49%)
- Sector Skill Councils (SSCs): 37 SSCs covering industries from textiles to IT; develop course content, assess candidates
- India's demographic dividend: 65% of population below 35 years; 12 million new entrants to workforce annually
- NEP 2020: vocational education integration from Class 6; 50% GER in vocational education by 2025 target
Connection to this news: PMKVY is the primary implementation vehicle for India's demographic dividend strategy — converting the large youth population into a skilled workforce. The 10-year data provides the evidence base for assessing whether this strategy is succeeding.
Skill Development and the ILO Framework
India's skilling targets are framed against the International Labour Organization's (ILO) standards. The ILO's Convention No. 142 on Human Resources Development (1975) urges countries to adopt policies to develop technical and vocational education. India has ratified 47 ILO conventions. The NSQF is aligned with the ASEAN Qualifications Reference Framework (AQRF) to enhance international recognition of Indian skill credentials — facilitating labour mobility for the 5.5 million Indians in Gulf Cooperation Council countries and other markets.
- ILO headquarters: Geneva; India is a founding member (1919)
- ILO Convention No. 142 (1975): vocational guidance and training — encourages national training systems linked to employment
- India's international skilling partnerships: India-Germany Dual Education System collaboration; India-Japan Technical Intern Training Program
- Skill gap analysis: India needs to train/retrain 400 million workers by 2022 (National Skill Development Policy 2009 target); revised under NEP 2020
- Recognition of Indian qualifications abroad: NSQF-AQRF alignment supports this for ASEAN markets
Connection to this news: PMKVY's emphasis on NSQF-mapped certifications is partly designed to make Indian workers' credentials recognisable internationally — directly supporting India's goal of positioning as a global skilled labour supplier.
Key Facts & Data
- PMKVY launched: 2015; total trained (2015–Dec 2025): 1.64 crore; certified: 1.29 crore
- Employer willingness to hire PMKVY candidates: 94%
- RPL candidates with higher salary post-certification: 52%
- PMKVY 4.0 (2022–26): 28.19 lakh enrolled; 18.76 lakh trained; 9.41 lakh certified (as of 2024)
- NSDC: established 2008–09; 51% private + 49% Government
- Sector Skill Councils: 37 across industries; develop and assess NSQF-aligned courses
- India's youth: 65% population below 35; ~12 million new workforce entrants annually