Labour Reforms Background
Labour Reforms Background
H
Semester: II nd
Paper Code: BCOMH202
Title of the Paper: Indian Economy
Name of Faculty: Anju Singh
Designation: Assistant Professor
Since it is in the Concurrent List, both the Parliament and the state legislatures
can enact laws on it.
As per the Central Government, before the new labour codes were passed,
there were more than 40 central laws and more than 100 state laws on labour
and related matters.
The Second National Commission on Labour (2002) recommended that the
central labour laws should be integrated into groups like:
Industrial relations
Wages
Social security
Safety
Welfare and working conditions
This was recommended by the Commission because the existing labour laws
were archaic, complex and had inconsistent definitions. The Commission
suggested simplification of the labour codes for the sake of transparency and
uniformity.
In 2019, the Central Government introduced four bills on labour codes to consolidate
29 central laws. These are:
1. Code on Wages
2. Industrial Relations Code
3. Social Security Code
4. Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code
While the Wages Code was passed in 2019, the other three bills were referred to a
Standing Committee on Labour. As per the recommendations of the Committee, the
government replaced these bills with new ones in September 2020, and these were
passed in the same month.
The Rules for all the four labour code bills would be notified in one go according to
the Labour Ministry. Hence, even though the draft Rules for the Wages Code had
been circulated in 2019 itself, the Ministry withheld its finalisation and
implementation.
The Wages Code seeks to regulate wage and bonus payments in all
employments where any industry, business, trade or manufacture is carried
out.
This code replaces the following laws:
Minimum Wages Act, 1948
Payment of Wages Act, 1936
Payment of Bonus Act, 1965
Equal Remuneration Act, 1976
Coverage of the Code on Wages:
The code will apply to all employees.
All employees whose wages do not exceed a specific monthly amount will be
entitled to an annual bonus.
The Code prohibits gender discrimination in wages and recruitment of people
for the same work or work of similar nature.
Work of a similar nature is defined as work for which the skill, effort,
experience, and responsibility required are the same.
Advisory boards
Advisory boards will be set up by the central and state governments.
These boards will consist of an equal number of employees and
employers, state government representatives and independent persons.
One-third of the boards will be women members.
These boards will advise the governments on minimum wage fixing and
increasing the employment opportunities for women.
The Code specifies penalties for offences committed by an employer.
Contravention of any provision of the Code
Paying less than the minimum wage
1. There is no clarity on the formula for fixing the minimum wage and also on
the particular authority designated for setting the minimum wages.
2. The fixing of minimum wages on the basis on geography, skill and difficulty
levels of the work, etc. might bring in a lot of discretionary power to the hands
of the administrators since many of these factors are not easy to measure. This
might lead to adverse effects like lobbying.
3. The clause for the deduction of wages seems arbitrary and it might prevent
workers from unionising in fear of a deduction in wages.
4. The Code omits the principal employer’s liability to pay wages if the labour
contractor had failed to do so. The principal employer is defined broadly in
the Code making it difficult to pinpoint responsibility for payment of wages.
This is a major issue since, in India, a majority of the workers are contract
labourers.
5. The Code also takes away the jurisdiction of courts in providing justice to
workers who have faced violations with respect to their wages. This means
that workers can no longer access courts to contest the wages paid to them by
their employers, but can only approach the quasi-judicial body and appellate
authority set up under the provisions of the Wage Code.