Context:
The Labour Codes enacted during 2019–2020—covering industrial relations, wages, social security, and occupational safety—have sparked serious concerns regarding their impact on informal (unorganised) workers, who constitute over 90% of India’s workforce and contribute nearly 65% of GDP. Editorial critiques highlight the erosion of worker protections, dilution of welfare mechanisms, and weakening of democratic labour governance.
Key Highlights:
Nature of the Labour Reforms:
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Four consolidated Labour Codes:
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Industrial Relations Code
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Code on Wages
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Social Security (SS) Code
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Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions (OSHWC) Code
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Passed without tripartite consultation through the Indian Labour Conference (ILC).
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Raises concerns over procedural legitimacy and worker representation.
Impact on Occupational Safety & Health:
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OSHWC Code replaces sector-specific laws such as the Building and Other Construction Workers (BOCW) Act, 1996.
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Introduces web-based inspections, undermining physical workplace monitoring.
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Violates ILO Convention 81 (Labour Inspection), ratified by India.
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Fails to adequately address occupational diseases like:
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Silicosis (mining, construction)
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Pesticide-induced cancers (agriculture)
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Chronic illnesses in salt pan workers
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Contravenes ILO Convention 161 (Occupational Health Services).
Social Security & Welfare Concerns:
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Social Security Code abolishes sector-specific cesses used to fund welfare boards.
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Establishes a single central welfare board, threatening existing decentralised systems.
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In Tamil Nadu, this could dissolve 39 sector-specific welfare boards protecting informal workers.
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Welfare schemes for unorganised workers are vaguely defined, with no guaranteed funding mechanism.
Federal & State-Level Implications:
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e-Shram portal centralises registration of informal workers.
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Could enable Centre to control nearly ₹1 lakh crore in accumulated welfare funds.
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States like Andhra Pradesh have closed welfare boards post-codes.
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Tamil Nadu, with nearly 3 crore informal workers, is deliberating rule-making to protect its welfare architecture.
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Kerala’s model cited, where States resist dilution of labour protections.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Dilution of labour rights under consolidated labour codes.
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Causes:
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Push for labour market flexibility
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Ease of doing business agenda
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Centralisation of welfare governance
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Government Position:
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Consolidation simplifies laws
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Claims of universal social security
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Challenges:
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Exclusion of informal workers
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Weak enforcement mechanisms
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Loss of dedicated welfare funds
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Impact:
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Increased vulnerability of informal labour
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Erosion of occupational safety standards
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Relevant Mains Points:
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Facts & Provisions:
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Informal sector employs over 90% of India’s workforce.
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BOCW Act, 1996 provided cess-funded welfare boards.
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Labour Codes lack mandatory funding guarantees for welfare.
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Keywords & Conceptual Clarity:
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Informalisation of Labour, Tripartite Governance, Social Security Architecture, Labour Federalism
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International Commitments:
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ILO Convention 81 – Labour Inspection
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ILO Convention 161 – Occupational Health
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Way Forward:
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Restore tripartite consultations in labour reforms
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Ensure ring-fenced welfare funds for informal workers
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Preserve State autonomy in labour welfare
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Align domestic laws with ILO standards
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: Social justice, governance, federalism
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GS 3: Labour reforms, informal economy, inclusive growth
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Prelims: Labour laws, ILO conventions, welfare mechanisms
