Context:
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The Supreme Court has urged the Union government to enact a comprehensive law for the protection of domestic workers, a highly vulnerable and informal workforce.
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Millions of domestic workers, mostly women from marginalized communities, continue to face exploitation due to lack of legal safeguards.
Key Highlights:
Supreme Court Direction / Governance Framework
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In January, the Supreme Court directed the Union government to:
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Enact a law safeguarding domestic workers’ rights
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Form a committee to prepare a legal framework
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However, the committee reportedly lacked representation from domestic workers themselves.
Scale and Social Profile of Domestic Work
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India has an estimated 4 million to 90 million domestic workers.
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Majority are:
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Women and young girls
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Migrants
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From SC/ST and economically weaker communities
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International Commitments: ILO Convention 189
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The International Labour Organization (ILO) adopted Convention 189 (2011) to ensure dignity and decent work for domestic workers.
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India has not yet ratified this convention, limiting global-standard protections.
State-Level Initiatives: Karnataka Bill 2025
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Karnataka introduced the Domestic Workers (Social Security and Welfare) Bill, 2025, which proposes:
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Mandatory registration of workers
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Written employment contracts
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Minimum wage guarantee
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Welfare fund contributions
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Key Provisions of Karnataka Model
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Employers must contribute 5% of wages to a welfare fund.
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Contracts will improve accountability and reduce arbitrary exploitation.
Challenges in Domestic Work Regulation
Invisible Workplace and Atomization
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Domestic work occurs inside private homes, making:
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Workplace inspections difficult
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Harassment harder to detect
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Child labour risks higher
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Migrant Worker Vulnerability
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Absence of national law harms workers who migrate across states or from neighboring countries.
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Protection remains fragmented and inconsistent.
Existing Welfare Boards: Tamil Nadu Example
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Tamil Nadu has a welfare board under the Tamil Nadu Manual Worker Act, 1982.
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Yet, registration remains low and wages often fall below the stipulated minimum of ₹37–39 per hour.
NPDW Recommendations
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The National Platform for Domestic Workers (NPDW) drafted a Bill in 2017, suggesting:
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Compulsory registration of workers, employers, and agencies
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A workbook maintained by both parties and endorsed monthly
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Strong grievance redress mechanisms
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Women’s Safety and Sexual Harassment Protection
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Local Complaints Committees under the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace Act must be set up at:
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Panchayat level
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Urban local body level
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This would ensure accessibility for domestic workers facing abuse.
Structural Issues Beyond Wages
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Long-term solutions must address:
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Housing insecurity
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Social protection portability
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Access to healthcare and childcare
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Relevant Prelims Points:
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Domestic Worker: Person engaged in household services within an employer’s home.
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Minimum Wage: Legally mandated lowest remuneration.
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Social Security: Public measures ensuring protection against economic hardship.
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ILO Convention 189 (2011): Global framework for domestic workers’ rights.
Issue + Causes
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Domestic workers remain unprotected due to:
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Informal nature of employment
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Lack of national legislation
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Power imbalance in private workplaces
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Poor enforcement of wage and safety norms
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Benefits of Legal Protection
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Ensures dignity of labour and decent working conditions.
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Reduces exploitation, harassment, and child labour.
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Supports women’s empowerment and social justice.
Challenges / Impact
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Difficulty of monitoring private homes.
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Resistance from employers due to perceived regulatory burden.
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Fragmented state-level welfare schemes without portability.
Relevant Mains Points:
Social Justice Dimension
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Domestic workers represent intersection of:
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Gender vulnerability
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Caste-based marginalization
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Informal sector exploitation
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Polity and Governance Linkages
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Need for enforceable rights-based framework ensuring:
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Registration
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Contracts
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Minimum wages
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Grievance redress
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Social security benefits
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Way Forward
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Enact a comprehensive national legislation aligned with ILO Convention 189.
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Ensure worker representation in policymaking committees.
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Create portable social security systems for migrants.
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Strengthen local complaint mechanisms for women’s safety.
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Address structural issues like housing and welfare access.
UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2 (Social Justice): Vulnerable workers, welfare legislation, labour rights
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GS 2 (Polity): Supreme Court directives, legal reforms, governance gaps
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GS 1 (Indian Society): Gender, caste, informal labour sector
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Prelims: ILO Convention 189, minimum wage, welfare boards
