According to the new survey conducted by YouGov, an Internet-based market research and data analytics firm, on Wednesday, April 15, every 1 in 5 Indians is now worried about losing his or her job as the coronavirus pandemic has shut industries and businesses in India. Overall unemployment has already risen to 23.4 per cent. 

The survey claims that some Indians worry about the economic impact of the virus such as losing their jobs (20 per cent), getting a pay cut (16 per cent), or not getting a bonus or increment this year (8 per cent).

Unemployment
Job seekers attend a job fair organised by the employment department of the Delhi state government in New Delhi.Reuters

Urban unemployment rate soared to 30.9 per cent

Early estimates indicate that millions of jobs are at stake in India and urban unemployment rate has soared to 30.9 per cent. 

As people have been staying home for roughly three weeks now, data from YouGov's ongoing COVID-19 tracker shows that fear levels among people have stabilised over time.

There has been a marginal decline in the number of people saying they are very or fairly scared of contracting the virus – at 64 per cent, down from 66 per cent last week.

Survey conducted on 1,000 respondents between April 7-10

The number of people saying they are not very or not at all scared has also been stable at 27 per cent. Although fear levels have stabilised, people do have concerns related to the pandemic, the biggest being the unavailability of essential items, which 37 per cent Indians are worried about. The survey was conducted on 1,000 respondents in India between April 7-10.

Fear has notably declined for the oldest generation of Baby Boomers, with 53 per cent now saying they are very or fairly scared as opposed to 61 per cent saying this last week.

The data showed that nearly half (47 per cent) have started exercising at home to keep themselves fit and just as many people (46 per cent) are making video calls to friends and family, who in normal times wouldn't have turned to this form of communication. Women were more likely to take up this technology as compared to men (50 per cent vs 43 per cent).