The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted labour markets across the world, affecting both developed and developing economies in unprecedented ways. Rural areas experienced the crisis in particularly distinctive forms because their economic structures differ significantly from urban labour markets. Unlike cities, where formal and salaried employment is relatively more common, rural economies are largely dependent on agriculture, informal labour, seasonal work, and small-scale self-employment activities. When lockdowns, mobility restrictions, and economic slowdowns occurred during the pandemic, millions of workers lost wage employment and were compelled to return to their native villages. This large-scale reverse migration placed considerable pressure on rural economies that were already limited in terms of employment opportunities. As a result, many households were forced to adopt alternative livelihood strategies to sustain their income and survival. One of the most significant responses to this economic disruption was the growing reliance on self-employment, including small businesses, agricultural diversification, home-based enterprises, and local service activities. In many cases, individuals who had previously depended on wage labour or urban employment began to establish their own micro-level economic activities within rural communities. These changes indicate not only a short-term coping mechanism but also a broader transformation in rural labour markets in the post-COVID period. The pandemic exposed deep structural vulnerabilities in rural employment systems, including lack of social security, unstable income sources, and limited access to formal jobs. At the same time, it also accelerated certain adaptive trends such as entrepreneurship, digital participation, and community-based economic practices. This article therefore examines how rural employment patterns have evolved in the post-COVID era, with particular emphasis on the rise, transformation, and reconfiguration of self-employment as a key livelihood strategy in rural economies.
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Nitendra Kumar
Tilka Manjhi Bhagalpur University
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Nitendra Kumar (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d894526c1944d70ce054de — DOI: https://doi.org/10.56975/ijvra.v4i4.703048