INDIAN LABOUR LAW
BY
SMART
LEARNING WAY
Indian labour law refer to laws regulating
labour in India. Traditionally Indian governments at federal and state level
have sought to ensure a high degree of protection for workers, but in practice,
legislative rights only cover a minority of workers. India is a federal form of
government and because labour is a subject in the concurrent list of the Indian
Constitution, labour matters are in the jurisdiction of both central and state
governments. Both central and state governments have enacted laws on labour
relations and employment issues.
History
Indian labour law is closely connected to the
Indian independence movement, and the campaigns of passive resistance leading
up to independence. While India was under colonial rule by the British Raj,
labour rights, trade unions, and freedom of association were all suppressed.
Workers who sought better conditions, and trade unions who campaigned through
strike action were frequently, and violently suppressed. After independence was
won in 1947, the Constitution of India of 1950 embedded a series of fundamental
labour rights in the constitution, particularly the right to join and take
action in a trade union, the principle of equality at work, and the aspiration
of creating a living wage with decent working conditions.
1921
Buckingham and Carnatic Mills Strike
1926
Binny Mills Strike
1928
South Indian Railway Strike
Meerut Conspiracy Case (1929)
1974
railway strike in India
Great Bombay Textile Strike in 1982
Harthal in Kerala 2012
HCL
recruitment issue in 2012
Constitutional
rights
In the Constitution of India from 1950,
articles 14-16, 19(1)(c), 23-24, 38, and 41-43A directly concern labour rights.
Article 14 states everyone should be equal before the law, article 15
specifically says the state should not discriminate against citizens, and
article 16 extends a right of "equality of opportunity" for
employment or appointment under the state. Article 19(1)(c) gives everyone a
specific right "to form associations or unions". Article 23 prohibits
all trafficking and forced labour, while article 24 prohibits child labour
under 14 years old in a factory, mine or "any other hazardous
employment".
Contract
and rights
Scope
of protection
Indian labour law makes a distinction between
people who work in "organised" sectors and people working in
"unorganised sectors".[citation needed] The laws list the different
industrial sectors to which various labour rights apply. People who do not fall
within these sectors, the ordinary law of contract applies.[citation needed]
India's labor laws underwent a major update in
the Industrial Disputes Act of 1948. Since then, an additional 45 national laws
expand or intersect with the 1948 act, and another 200 state laws control the
relationships between the worker and the company. These laws mandate all
aspects of employer-employee interaction, such as companies must keep 6
attendance logs, 10 different accounts for overtime wages, and file 5 types of
annual returns. The scope of labour laws extend from regulating the height of
urinals in workers' washrooms to how often a work space must be lime-washed.
Inspectors can examine workspace anytime and declare fines for violation of any
labour laws and regulations.VVG
Employment
contracts
Among the employment contracts that are
regulated in India, the regulation involves significant government involvement
which is rare in developed countries. The Industrial Employment (Standing
Orders) Act 1946 requires that employers have terms including working hours,
leave, productivity goals, dismissal procedures or worker classifications,
approved by a government body.
The Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition)
Act 1970 aims at regulating employment of contract labour so as to place it at
par with labour employed directly.Women are now permitted to work night shifts
too (10pm to 6am).
The Latin phrase 'dies non' is being widely
used by disciplinary authorities in government and industries for denoting the
'unauthorised absence' to the delinquent employees. According to Shri R.
P.Saxena, Chief Engineer, Indian Railways, dies-non is a period which neither
counted in service nor considered as break in service.A person can be marked
dies-non, if
1.Absent without proper permission.
2.When on duty left without proper permission.
3.While in office but refused to perform duties.
In cases of such willful and unauthorised
absence from work, the leave sanctioning authority may decide and order that
the days on which the work is not performed be treated as dies non-on the
principle of no work no pay. This will be without prejudice to any other action
that the competent authority might take against the persons resorting to such
practises. The principle of "no work no pay" is widely being used in
the banking industry in India. All other manufacturing industries and large
service establishments like railways,posts and telecommunications are also
implementing it to minimise the incidences of unauthorised absence of workers.
The term 'industry' infuses a contractual relationship between the employer and
the employee for sale of products and services which are produced through their
cooperative endeavor.
This contract together with the need to put in
efforts in producing goods and services imposes duties (including ancillary
duties) and obligations on the part of the employees to render services with
the tools provided and in a place and time fixed by the employer. And in
return, as a quid pro quo, the employer is enjoined to pay wages for work done
and or for fulfilling the contract of employment.Duties generally, including
ancillary duties, additional duties, normal duties, emergency duties, which
have to be done by the employees and payment of wages therefor. Where the
contract of employment is not fulfilled or work is not done as prescribed, the
principle of 'no work no pay' is brought into play.
Wage
regulation
The Payment
of Wages Act 1936 requires that
employees receive wages, on time, and without any unauthorised deductions.
Section 6 requires that people are paid in money rather than in kind. The law
also provides the tax withholdings the employer must deduct and pay to the
central or state government before distributing the wages.
The Minimum
Wages Act 1948 sets wages for
the different economic sectors that it states it will cover. It leaves a large
number of workers unregulated. Central and state governments have discretion to
set wages according to kind of work and location, and they range between as
much as INR 143 to 1120 per day for work in the so-called central sphere. State
governments have their own minimum wage schedules.
The Payment
of Gratuity Act 1972 applies to
establishments with 10 or more workers. Gratuity is payable to the employee if
he or she resigns or retires. The Indian government mandates that this payment
be at the rate of 15 days salary of the employee for each completed year of
service subject to a maximum of INR 1000000.
The Payment
of Bonus Act 1965, which applies
only to enterprises with over 20 people, requires bonuses are paid out of
profits based on productivity. The minimum bonus is currently 8.33 per cent of
salary.
Working
time
Weekly
Holidays Act 1942
Beedi
and Cigar Workers Act 1967
Health
and safety
The Workman's Compensation Act 1923 requires
that compensation is paid if workers are injured in the course of employment
for injuries, or benefits to dependents. The rates are low.
Factories Act 1948, consolidated existing
factory safety laws
Pensions
and insurance
The Employees' Provident Fund and
Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1952 created the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation
of India. This functions as a pension fund for old age security for the
organised workforce sector. For those workers, it creates Provident Fund to
which employees and employers contribute equally, and the minimum contributions
are 10-12 per cent of wages. On retirement, employees may draw their pension.
·
Indira Gandhi
National Old Age Pension Scheme
·
National Pension
Scheme
·
Public Provident
Fund (India)
The
Employees' State Insurance provides
health and social security insurance. This was created by the Employees' State
Insurance Act 1948.
The Unorganized Workers' Social Security Act 2008
was passed to extend the coverage of life and disability benefits, health and
maternity benefits, and old age protection for unorganised workers.
"Unorganised" is defined as home-based workers, self-employed workers
or daily-wage workers. The central government was meant to formulate the
welfare system through rules produced by the National Social Security Board.
The
Maternity Benefit Act 1961,
creates rights to payments of maternity benefits for any woman employee who
worked in any establishment for a period of at least 80 days during the 12
months immediately preceding the date of her expected delivery.
Workplace
participation
Trade
unions
Article 19(1)(c) of the Constitution of India
gives everyone an enforceable right "to form associations or unions".
The Trade Unions Act 1926, amended in 2001,
contains rules on governance and general rights of trade unions.
Management
participation
It was the view of many in the Indian
Independence Movement, including Mahatma Gandhi, that workers had as much of a
right to participate in management of firms as shareholders or other property
owners. Article 43A of the Constitution, inserted by the Forty-second Amendment
of the Constitution of India in 1976, created a right to codetermination by
requiring the state to legislate to "secure the participation of workers
in the management of undertakings". However, like other rights in Part IV,
this article is not directly enforceable but instead creates a duty upon state
organs to implement its principles through legislation (and potentially through
court cases). In 1978 the Sachar Report recommended legislation for inclusion
of workers on boards, however this had not yet been implemented.
The Industrial Disputes Act 1947 section 3
created a right of participation in joint work councils to "provide
measures for securing amity and good relations between the employer and workmen
and, to that end to comment upon matters of their common interest or concern
and endeavour to compose any material difference of opinion in respect of such
matters". However, trade unions had not taken up these options on a large
scale. In National Textile Workers Union v Ramakrishnan the Supreme Court,
Bhagwati J giving the leading judgment, held that employees had a right to be
heard in a winding up petition of a company because their interests were
directly affected and their standing was not excluded by the wording of the
Companies Act 1956 section 398.
Collective
action
The Industrial Disputes Act 1947 regulates how
employers may address industrial disputes such as lockouts, layoffs,
retrenchment etc. It controls the lawful processes for reconciliation, adjudication
of labour disputes.
According to fundamental rules (FR 17A) of the
civil service of India, a period of unauthorised absence- (i) in the case of
employees working in industrial establishments, during a strike which has been
declared illegal under the provisions of the Industrial Disputes Act, 1947, or
any other law for the time being in force; (ii) in the case of other employees
as a result of action in combination or in concerted manner,such as during a
strike, without any authority from, or valid reason to the satisfaction of the
competent authority; shall be deemed to cause an interruption or break in the
service of the employee, unless otherwise decided by the competent authority
for the purpose of leave travel concession,quasi-permanency and eligibility for
appearing in departmental examinations, for which a minimum period of continuous
service is required.
·
Provisions of the
Factories Act 1948
Equality
Article 14 states everyone should be equal
before the law, article 15 specifically says the state should not discriminate
against citizens, and article 16 extends a right of "equality of
opportunity" for employment or appointment under the state. Article 23
prohibits all trafficking and forced labour, while article 24 prohibits child
labour under 14 years old in a factory, mine or "any other hazardous
employment".
·
Caste
Disabilities Removal Act 1850
Sex
discrimination
Article 39(d) of the Constitution provides
that men and women should receive equal pay for equal work. In the Equal
Remuneration Act 1976 implemented this principle in legislation.
Randhir
Singh v Union of India Supreme Court of India held that the principle of equal
pay for equal work is a constitutional goal and therefore capable of
enforcement through constitutional remedies under Article 32 of Constitution
State
of AP v G Sreenivasa Rao, equal pay for equal work does not mean that all the
members of the same cadre must receive the same pay packet irrespective of
their seniority, source of recruitment, educational qualifications and various
other incidents of service.
State
of MP v Pramod Baratiya, comparisons should focus on similarity of skill,
effort and responsibility when performed under similar conditions
Mackinnon Mackenzie & Co v Adurey D'Costa,
a broad approach is to be taken to decide whether duties to be performed are
similar
Migrant
workers
·
Interstate
Migrant Workmen Act 1979
Vulnerable
groups
Bonded Labour System (Abolition) Act 1976,
abolishes bonded labour, but estimates suggest that between 2 million and 5
million workers still remain in debt bondage in India.
·
Domestic workers
in India
Child labour in India is prohibited by the
Constitution, article 24, in factories, mines and hazardous employment, and
that under article 21 the state should provide free and compulsory education up
to a child is aged 14.However in practice, the laws are not enforced.
·
Sumangali (child
labour)
·
Juvenile Justice
(Care and Protection) of Children Act 2000
·
Child Labour
(Prohibition and Abolition) Act 1986
Dismissal
regulation
Some of India's most controversial labour laws
concern the procedures for dismissal contained in the Industrial Disputes Act
1947. A workmen who has been employed for over a year can only be dismissed if
permission is sought from and granted by the appropriate government office.Additionally,
before dismissal, valid reasons must be given, and there is a wait of at least
two months for government permission, before a lawful termination can take
effect. Redundancy pay must be given, set at 15 days' average pay for each
complete year of continuous service. An employee who has worked for 4 years in
addition to various notices and due process, must be paid a minimum of the
employee's wage equivalent to 60 days before retrenchment, if the government
grants the employer a permission to layoff.
A permanent worker can be terminated only for
proven misconduct or for habitual absence. The Industrial Disputes Act (1947)
requires companies employing more than 100 workers to seek government approval
before they can fire employees or close down. In practice, permissions for firing
employees are seldom granted. Indian laws require a company to get permission
for dismissing workers with plant closing, even if it is necessary for economic
reasons. The government may grant or deny permission for closing, even if the
company is losing money on the operation.
The dismissed worker has a right to appeal,
even if the government has granted the dismissal application. Indian labour
regulations provide for a number of appeal and adjudicating authorities –
conciliation officers, conciliation boards, courts of inquiry, labour courts,
industrial tribunals and the national industrial tribunal – under the
Industrial Disputes Act. These involve complex procedures. Beyond these labour
appeal and adjucating procedures, the case can proceed to respective State High
Court or finally the Supreme Court of India.
·
Bharat Forge Co
Ltd v Uttam Manohar Nakate [2005] INSC 45, a worker found sleeping for the
fourth time in 1983. Bharat Forge initiated disciplinary proceedings under the
Industrial Employment Act (1946). After five months of proceedings, the worker
was found guilty and dismissed. The worker appealed to the labour court,
pleading that his dismissal was unfair under Indian Labour laws. The labour
court sided with the worker, directed he be reinstated, with 50% back wages.
The case went through several rounds of appeal and up through India's court
system. After 22 years, the Supreme Court of India upheld his dismissal in
2005.
Unemployment
·
National Rural
Employment Guarantee Act 2005
The Industries (Regulation and Development)
Act 1951 declared that manufacturing industries under its First Schedule were
under common central government regulations in addition to whatever laws state
government enact. It reserved over 600 products that can only be manufactured
in small scale enterprises, thereby regulating who can enter in these
businesses, and above all placing a limit on the number of employees per
company for the listed products. The list included all key technology and
industrial products in the early 1950s, including products ranging from certain
iron and steel products, fuel derivatives, motors, certain machinery, machine
tools, to ceramics and scientific equipment.
State
laws
Each state in India may have special labour
regulations in certain circumstances.
Gujarat
In 2004 the State of Gujarat amended the
Industrial Disputes Act to allow greater labour market flexibility in the
Special Export Zones of Gujarat. The law allows companies within SEZs to lay
off redundant workers, without seeking the permission of the government, by
giving a formal notice and severance pay.
West
Bengal
The West Bengal government revised its labor
laws making it virtually impossible to shut down a loss-making factory.[33] The
West Bengal law applies to all companies within the state that employ 50 or
more employees.[34]
Criticisms
and reforms
Many observers have argued that India's labour
laws should be reformed. The laws have
constrained the growth of the formal manufacturing sector.According to a
World Bank report in 2008, heavy reform would be desirable. The executive
summary stated,
“ India's
labor regulations - among the most restrictive and complex in the world - have
constrained the growth of the formal manufacturing sector where these laws have
their widest application. Better designed labor regulations can attract more
labor- intensive investment and create jobs for India's unemployed millions and
those trapped in poor quality jobs. Given the country's momentum of growth, the
window of opportunity must not be lost for improving the job prospects for the
80 million new entrants who are expected to join the work force over the next
decade. ”
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has said that
new labour laws are needed.
In Uttam Nakate case, the Bombay High Court
held that dismissing an employee for repeated sleeping on the factory floor was
illegal - a decision which was overturned by the Supreme Court of India.
Moreover, it took two decades to complete the legal process. In 2008, the World
Bank criticised the complexity, lack of modernisation and flexibility in Indian
regulations.
Bibliography
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_labour_law
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