Strategic Hustle: How Young Kashmiris Are Beating the Waiting Game
By Uzma Qadir Mir
In a cramped Srinagar apartment, a 24-year-old Kashmiri graduate scrolls through her laptop while arranging orders for a small handicraft store she runs through Instagram.
Behind every order is a story of creative survival, of a young person building opportunity with the resources within reach.
A pile of applications occupies a corner desk, demonstrating careful strategy as young people turn planning into action in a system marked by long delays.
The shift from dreaming of a stable government post to building a digital micro-enterprise has a name among sociologists: strategic pragmatism.
Over the years, youth devoted time, energy, and resources chasing public sector jobs that remained just out of reach.
By 2026, they are channeling ambition into work that delivers results quickly, even if the rewards are small or unpredictable.
Laptops glow late into the night, freelance profiles take the place of exam forms, and content pages double as shops.
These subtle but significant signs reflect a generational recalibration of aspiration unfolding in real time.
Unemployment in Jammu and Kashmir remains stubborn. Official figures place the overall rate at 6.1 percent, with youth unemployment nearly double the national average.
Recruitment delays, exam cancellations, and........
