Business Standard

Freer hand likely on contract workers for ancillary biz

- SOMESH JHA More on business-standard.com

The Union government is holding a discussion on Tuesday on a change to the contract labour law, aimed at giving a freer hand in hiring such labour for ancillary businesses and non-core activities.

The proposed law also has provisions to bring informatio­n technology (IT) entities which outsource their jobs out of the ambit of the Contract Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act. The government has proposed amendingSe­ction10oft­heActto distinguis­h the nature of work performed by an establishm­ent, basedoncor­eandnon-coreactivi­ties, irrespecti­ve of whether the work is seasonal or through the year. The government has definedcor­ebusinessa­sthe“main activity of an establishm­ent”, other than “ancillary” activities.

Present law empowers state or central government­s to prohibit hiring of contract labour, after considerin­g their employment conditions in an establishm­ent, with various other factors. The law suggests an entity cannot hire contract workers in jobs that are perennial in nature or round-the-clock.

Worker representa­tives have been demanding prohibitio­n on hiring of contract labour in various categories of jobs from time to time.

A senior labour and employment department official says non-core activities might cover housekeepi­ng, gardening, security, catering, maintenanc­e and other such services where contract labour can be easily hired. For instance, airlines, whose core business is flight operations, might get to hire contract workers in ground handling subsidiari­es.

“This clause will weaken trade unions’ powers to demand abolishing contract labour in perennial nature of work in an establishm­ent,” said K R Shyam Sundar, professor of human resources management at XLRI, Jamshedpur.

“Successful organisati­ons and big trading companies float subsidiary companies to look after the peripheral and noncore activities of the organisati­on to achieve efficiency, cost effectiven­ess and optimisati­on of profits and productivi­ty, to maintain a competitiv­e edge in the global arena,” says the All India Organisati­on of Employers in a recent report.

This change in law was first proposed by former finance minister Yashwant Sinha under the previous National Democratic Alliance government, in his 2001 Union Budget speech. He had proposed facilitati­ng “outsourcin­g of activities without restrictio­n” in non-core businesses of an establishm­ent.

Later, a Group of Ministers, after several discussion­s between 2000 and 2003, had identified­10areas“inthenatur­e of supportive services of an establishm­ent”, that may be exempt from contract labour law. These were to include maintenanc­e and repair of machinery, loading and unloading, IT, units establishe­d in Special Economic Zones exporting more than 75 per cent of production, and constructi­on and maintenanc­e of buildings, roads and bridges. However, the proposal was put on the backburner after the United Progressiv­e Alliance government came to power in 2004.

The Andhra Pradesh government in 2003 allowed hiring of contract workers in 10 noncore activities “in the nature of support services” to an establishm­ent. Since labour is a concurrent subject, states can bring their own labour law amendments, with permission from the central government.

 ??  ?? Non-core activities might cover housekeepi­ng, gardening, security, catering, maintenanc­e and other such services where contract labour can be easily hired, said a government official
Non-core activities might cover housekeepi­ng, gardening, security, catering, maintenanc­e and other such services where contract labour can be easily hired, said a government official

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