Why India produces 1.5 million engineers but most aren't job-ready
Every year, India produces approximately 1.5 million engineering graduates — more than the United States and China combined. Yet a staggering 80% of these graduates are considered unemployable by t...

Source: DEV Community
Every year, India produces approximately 1.5 million engineering graduates — more than the United States and China combined. Yet a staggering 80% of these graduates are considered unemployable by the industry they trained for. This is not just a statistic. It is a systemic failure that affects students, companies, and the Indian economy at large. So what is really going wrong? The numbers don't lie According to NASSCOM and the India Skills Report, fewer than 20% of Indian engineering graduates are directly employable in core technical roles. Over 60% of companies report that fresh engineering hires require 3–6 months of retraining before they can contribute meaningfully. Meanwhile, India's IT sector faces a talent shortage in advanced skills like AI, cloud, and cybersecurity — even as millions of engineers sit underutilised. Why the gap exists — 5 root causes Outdated curriculum — Most engineering colleges still teach syllabi designed in the 1990s. Emerging technologies like machine le