Roughly 5.2 lakh young people are growing up in Arunachal Pradesh. The state registers 130 MSMEs per 10,000 residents. About 2% of its labour force is in formal-sector employment covered by EPFO. The picture is uneven: a stronger urban services and formal-sector economy in Upper Siang and a few corridor districts, alongside a rural workforce where a large share are in own-account work in micro enterprises.
Arunachal Pradesh has 27 districts and a population of about 16.2 lakh, just under a third aged 15 to 29. the urban share, at 22.3%, is concentrated in the largest cities. per capita income is Rs 1.0 lakh per year.
Urban Arunachal Pradesh spends Rs 5,557.33 per person per month; rural Arunachal Pradesh spends Rs 3,018.21, a gap of 1.8 times. labour force participation runs at 72.1%. unemployment is 5.8%. only 20 of every 100 working young people hold a regular wage job, 75 are self-employed (mostly in own-account work in micro enterprises), and 5 work in casual employment. agriculture employs 69.7% of the workforce, construction 6.1%, apparel and textiles 0.4%.
Arunachal Pradesh registers 130 MSMEs per 10,000 residents. together they employ around 56,836 workers. manufacturing accounts for 24.7% of MSME activity; the remaining 75.3% are in services.
EPFO coverage stands at about 2% of the labour force. the state has 695 EPFO-registered establishments. A young person in Arunachal Pradesh who finds a formal-sector wage job is in a small minority of the working-age population.
Class 10 outcomes in the National Achievement Survey 2021 average 40.7%; English at 53.8%, mathematics at 27.7% (the persistent weak link). Secondary enrolment in classes 9 to 12 is 47.3%; a meaningful share of the cohort that starts upper-primary does not reach a Class 12 examination.
The state's ITI system trains tens of thousands of young people every year. Top trades by admission are Electrician (NSQF), Draughtsman (Civil) (NSQF), Surveyor (NSQF). PMKVY-funded short courses in Arunachal Pradesh most often train young people for roles such as Social Media Influencer, Domestic Data Entry Operator, Hand Embroiderer (Addawala); coverage in Upper Subansiri, Lepa Rada, Kurung Kumey is materially smaller than in the top-rank corridor districts.
A state average says little about how a young person actually lives. The bottom-to-top decile MPCE gap in Arunachal Pradesh is more than 3.9 times. Stretch that to the district level and the spread widens further. A young person in Upper Subansiri, Lepa Rada, Kurung Kumey lives in a different opportunity environment from one in Upper Siang or East Siang, despite the same state passport.
The district is where democratic accountability and developmental delivery meet. When a young person needs a skill, a job, a scholarship, a certificate, or recourse against a stalled application, they interact with a school principal, an Anganwadi worker, an ITI training officer, a District Industries Centre staff member, a Common Service Centre operator, a panchayat secretary, a Block Development Officer, or the District Collectorate. The constellation of forty-two institutions that determines what happens to a young person sits, almost without exception, under district-administration coordination.
Each instrument that an elected representative or district officer can pull on already exists. An MP can direct MPLAD allocation toward libraries, skill centres, and digital infrastructure in the rural and small-town districts where formal-sector exposure is lowest. An MLA can shift state skill-mission allocation toward ITI trade recalibration. A district collector, who chairs the District Skill Committee and the District Development Coordination and Monitoring Committee, can coordinate Apprenticeship Portal registration drives. A panchayat president can ensure local Common Service Centres function and that scholarship-application camps run before annual deadlines.
What can your MP or MLA do · All 27 district scores · Arunachal Pradesh data dashboard · Arunachal Pradesh scheme finder · Youth employment, all India
Each district has its own youth opportunity scorecard, district-level indicators, and a recommendation set on skilling and entrepreneurship. The state average obscures the spread; the district pages show it.
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