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Unions’ demand for wage hike may not be met

Earlier in July, the Ministry revised the national floor-level daily wage from Rs. 137 to Rs. 160.

Updated - July 28, 2015 01:08 am IST - New Delhi

The Union government is unlikely to accept the demand of labour unions that the minimum national monthly wage rate for formal and informal sector jobs be raised to Rs. 15,000.

The Centre could peg this rate somewhere between Rs. 7,500 and Rs. 8,000 from the current Rs. 4,500, Union Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya told The Hindu in an interview on Friday.

Earlier in July, the Ministry revised the national floor-level daily wage from Rs. 137 to Rs. 160.

“It may not be feasible to hike the floor level to Rs. 15,000 … We are examining it and will take the final decision on the rate under the Minimum Wages Act, in consultation with colleagues including Union Finance Minister Arun Jaitley,” Mr. Dattatreya said.

An increase in the wage rate is among the 12 that the labour unions have put up before the Ministry during its consultations aimed at building a consensus on the labour reforms agenda of the government. With talks remaining inconclusive on most of these demands, the unions have called a nation-wide strike for September 12.

Last Sunday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi held consultations with the unions after their talks with an inter-ministerial panel headed by Mr. Jaitley remained inconclusive. Some of the unions had appreciated the Centre’s proposal requiring retrenched workers to be paid an average salary of 45 days of every year of service, which was three times the current 15-day limit, Mr. Dattatreya said.

A proposal that has not found acceptance is the one on doing away with the requirement of government permission for lay-offs, retrenchment or closures of factories employing fewer than 300 workers. This present limit is 100.

In line with the radical reforms that the Second Commission on Labour Laws proposed in 2002, the government plans to replace 44 laws with four codes relating to wages, industrial relations, small factories, social security and welfare, Mr. Dattatreya said.

The reforms being planned are aimed not only at enhancing India’s attractiveness to global and domestic investors but also at improving conditions for workers, he said.

This article has been corrected for a factual error.

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