Business Standard

Nasscom for policy tweak to enable longer WFH scenario

- NEHA ALAWADHI & DEBASIS MOHAPATRA

IT industry body National Associatio­n of Software and Services Companies (Nasscom) has written to the government, asking for measures to support its member entities with the pandemic looking set to impact the industry in the near term.

Nasscom has asked for the abolition of OSPS (other service providers) under the Department of Telecom, under which certain kinds of work (such as voice calls) cannot be shifted to employees’ homes. This will enable a longer term work-from-home (WFH) scenario, which several firms like Tata Consultanc­y Services have already spoken about. While the industry has received an extension in relaxation of OSP norms until July 31, these have to be abolished altogether if WFH is to become a new normal. Keshav Murugesh, CEO of WNS Global Services, said: “Nasscom is already working with the government to leverage this crisis and create new models of engagement, including changing labour laws.”

The complexiti­es in asking for changes to labour laws will arise once it requires tinkering with aspects that fall under states’ jurisdicti­on.

The key assumption in labour laws is that workers go to a physical workplace located in a given state. “Labour laws are on the concurrent list of the Constituti­on, and hence regulatory requiremen­ts differ from state to state. For example, profession­al tax is a state subject. If I am an employer in Pune and my employees are working from home in Lucknow, Chennai and Indore, then would I have to get a profession­al tax registrati­on and pay the same in all four states?” said Rishi Agrawal, co-founder and CEO of Avantis Regtech (a Teamlease firm).

He added that of 18 states having a profession­al tax requiremen­t, 16 allow filing of tax electronic­ally, while Gujarat and Tamil Nadu have a manual process. This means that to file profession­al tax for employees working in different districts of these two states, a company potentiall­y has to ask a consultant to file taxes manually in each district. Similarly, Labour Welfare Fund and minimum wages are state subjects.

Extending SEZ, tax norms

Extending the Special Economic Zones policy has been a key ask of Nasscom since last year, with the sunset clause having expired in March 2020. The industry has received a few months’ extension, but has asked for further extension of five years. At present, IT firms based in SEZS are mandated to collect their payment in foreign exchange for delivery of services to domestic tariff-based customers.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India