Thousands of trade union workers protest India’s new labour codes

Hello and welcome to the details of Thousands of trade union workers protest India’s new labour codes and now with the details

Nevin Al Sukari - Sana'a -  

MUMBAI, Nov 26 — Thousands of trade union workers across India protested Wednesday against the government’s rollout of new labour codes, saying they would lead to corporate exploitation and erode their hard-won rights.

The world’s fifth-largest economy last week implemented long-awaited labour laws that will replace colonial-era legislation and simplify a maze of confusing regulation.

The overhaul consolidates 29 existing labour laws into four key codes, with the number of rules being cut from more than 1,400 to about 350 but unions say the reforms will hurt workers’ rights.

Gautam Mody from the New Trade Union Initiative said workers from across all sectors were protesting Wednesday outside factories and in many city centres.

“Workers have been blindsided by the government,” he told AFP.

“We want fairness, justice and equity before the law which are being denied under the new codes,” Mody said.

While the new regulations boost safety standards and mandate guaranteed social security benefits for gig workers, they also allow for longer factory shifts, make it tougher for workers to conduct strikes and easier for medium-sized firms to fire employees.

A controversial key provision raises the threshold for firms that needed prior government permission for layoffs from 100 to 300 workers — which means companies with up to 300 employees can retrench staff without any approval.

‘Deceptive fraud’ 

The move has sparked worry among trade unions, aligned with parties opposed to Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who have called it a “deceptive fraud” against the nation’s working people.

The Centre of Indian Trade Unions (CITU) said in a statement that the government wanted to portray these codes as “pro-worker” and “modernising”.

But “in reality they constitute the most sweeping and aggressive abrogation of workers’ hard-won rights and entitlements since Independence, aimed at facilitating corporate exploitation, contractualisation and unrestrained hire-and-fire”.

Modi has said the overhaul represented an opportunity to eliminate compliance-intensive labour laws, often seen as preventing the Indian economy from wooing foreign investors.

He has described the changes as “one of the most comprehensive and progressive labour-oriented reforms since Independence.”

India remains the world’s fastest-growing major economy, but a slowdown over the last year has left it short of the eight percent growth rate that most economists say is needed to create millions of well paying jobs for its people.

US President Donald ’s tariff blitz, partly sparked by the White House’s anger over Delhi’s purchases of Russian oil, has also clouded the country’s economic outlook and raised questions over its energy security.

Analysts at Nomura said in a recent note that the labour law reform was an “attempt to modernise disparate, arcane and compliance-intensive labour laws” that have emerged as one of the “major challenges to the ease of doing business”.

But they added it was “part of a broader trend by the government to hasten economic reforms, especially in the wake of the 50 percent Trump tariffs”. — AFP 

These were the details of the news Thousands of trade union workers protest India’s new labour codes for this day. We hope that we have succeeded by giving you the full details and information. To follow all our news, you can subscribe to the alerts system or to one of our different systems to provide you with all that is new.

It is also worth noting that the original news has been published and is available at Malay Mail and the editorial team at AlKhaleej Today has confirmed it and it has been modified, and it may have been completely transferred or quoted from it and you can read and follow this news from its main source.

PREV Four killed in Hong Kong housing estate fire, several others injured
NEXT On the rise in Germany, far-right AfD deepens ties to Trump administration

Author Information

I am Jeff King and I’m passionate about business and finance news with over 4 years in the industry starting as a writer working my way up into senior positions. I am the driving force behind Al-KhaleejToday.NET with a vision to broaden the company’s readership throughout 2016. I am an editor and reporter of “Financial” category. Address: 383 576 Gladwell Street Longview, TX 75604, USA Phone: (+1) 903-247-0907 Email: [email protected]