Setting the stage for Labour Codes implementation

The Government is serious about enforcement of the Labour Codes. It has meticulously planned to kickstart their implementation process soon. This is reflected in its overall strategy to take up Labour Codes implementation plan with rigour in the forthcoming budget to be announced on 1st February 2025. To make this happen, it has bolstered its efforts in getting Delhi and West Bengal to issue their draft rules by 31st March 2025.

The Wages Code and the Social Security Code will be the first two Labour Codes in the series of four Codes to be enforced. This will ensure that the Labour Codes in general and the Wages and the Social Security Codes in particular gain nationwide acceptance.

These two Codes are intended to be enforced in three phases. Large firms (500 employees and above) may take the lead on mandatory statutory compliances in the first year of the rollout followed by mid-size firms (100-500 employees) in the second year and small organisations (100 employees or less) in the third year. Enforcing two Labour Codes instead of all the four Labour Codes together will lessen the overall compliance burden that primarily rests on the employers. Selecting the Wages and the Social Security Codes to be the first two Codes to be implemented will be a game changer. These two Codes largely benefit the workforce including contingent, gig and platform workers. Hence, both the trade unions and employees are likely to extend cooperation and support their employers in implementation of the Labour Codes. This will test the waters and pave the way for modernizing the Indian labour law regime to suit the modern workplace.

Making compliance of these two Labour Codes mandatory in the first phase for the large corporates will not only lessen the regulatory burden of MSMEs and mid to small-sized organisations but lay the essential groundwork for the remaining organisations to follow suit. Additionally, the large corporates will not only be well-equipped to initiate the implementation process but will help in identifying and removing the potential roadblocks sooner.

The understaffing issue, that currently plagues the efficiency of some of the labour departments, will not adversely impact the enforcement process because the authorities will only need to focus on specific category of employers. These employers will essentially be the GCCs, multinational companies and Indian conglomerates who prioritize corporate governance. Further, proposed shift in the enforcement authority’s role from Labour Inspector to Inspector-cum-Facilitator would fast-track implementation of the new provisions, as they would need to provide compliance guidance to defaulting employers and an opportunity to comply instead of prosecuting them in the first instance.

Such labour law reforms will signal a business-friendly ecosystem in India and aid in achieving a win-win for corporates and their workforce. This will in turn act as a catalyst to boost investor confidence and not only attract new foreign players to India but also encourage existing players to expand their Indian operations. Hence, balancing interests of employers and workers is need of the hour and would go a long way in enhancing workforce participation as India moves towards its goal of becoming a USD 5 trillion economy.

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By: Minu Dwivedi – Partner, Prashaant Malaviya and Purbasha Panda – Associates