NEW DELHI, May 1:
Labour Minister Santosh Gangwar today said a parliamentary standing committee has finalised its report on First Labour Code, Wage Code Bill 2017, and the legislation would be pushed for passage in the monsoon session of Parliament after the document is submitted.
The law will enable the Central Government to set benchmark minimum wages for different regions across the country. The bill’s provision provides that states cannot set minimum wages below the benchmark set by the Centre.
“I have spoken to the chairman of the committee (regarding finalisation of its report on Wage Code Bill). He told me that everything is completed and it will be submitted soon. We will push (the bill) for passage,” Gangwar told reporters on the sidelines of the International Labour Day.
The draft code on the bill was introduced in the Lok Sabha in August 2017. Thereafter, it was referred to the committee for scrutiny which is expected to submit its report in the monsoon session.
The bill also seeks to combine Payment of Wages Act, 1936, the Minimum Wages Act, 1949, the Payment of Bonus Act, 1965, and the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976, into one code. A senior official said that if everything goes well, the bill can be pushed for passage in the forthcoming monsoon session of Parliament.
Speaking at the International Labour Day celebrations here, Gangwar said the labour ministry wants 38 labour laws to be subsumed into four broad codes — wages, industrial relations, social security and occupational safety and health and working conditions. The codification of labour laws will remove the multiplicity of definitions and authorities, leading to ease of compliance without compromising wage security and social security to workers. (PTI)