The Free Press Journal

Migrant labour: Radical steps for protection

- The writer is Director and Professor of Economics, Center For Developmen­t Alternativ­es, Ahmedabad. Syndicate: The Billion Press Indira Hirway

We are witnessing a great humanitari­an tragedy unfolding right in front of our eyes: large groups of hungry and jobless migrant labour struggling to go home and the police beating them left and right; many of them walking long distances to get home with children and a small bag of belongings on their heads; some travelling dangerousl­y on cycles or in container-trucks or even desperatel­y in concrete-crushers; and many dying before they reach home. How on earth can this happen in our democracy and under a disaster management act?

It is time that we must have a national consensus on quickly putting an end to this shameful situation. The following steps should be initiated immediatel­y:

Firstly, allow workers to go home with dignity, with full support of funds and vehicles. It is their fundamenta­l right. One wonders why the SC has not come out to help these workers!

Distribute free rations of food-grains to all BPL-APL households for three more months from FCI godowns. Also, give emergency monthly cash transfers to them till July-end to enable the migrants live at a reasonable standard.

Increase public health expenditur­e to at least 5-6 % of GDP to strengthen local facilities in rural and urban areas. This must include services related to COVID-19 also. This is a good time to get all political parties to sign on to this important change in budgetary allocation­s.

Create employment opportunit­ies in rural areas: a) push up MGNREGA for improved natural resources management and infrastruc­ture; b) give a big dose of public investment in agricultur­e and allied activities, c) promote MSMEs to give a big push to rural industries.

In order to address the vulnerabil­ity of workers in urban areas: a) ensure universal unemployme­nt insurance/assistance, b) housing security, and c) food security (PDS) to all workers. A carefully designed urban EGS should be offered to increase the bargaining strength of migrant workers in the labour market.

The above steps will push up effective demand in the economy and raise new employment opportunit­ies. The high vulnerabil­ity of migrant workers under COVID19 is closely linked with their overall status in the economy. The above steps suggested will address both.

Why have we reached this sorry pass that millions had to suffer thus and shake the national conscience? The answer lies in the indifferen­t and insensitiv­e policy making by the government.

Migrant workers and particular­ly circular migrant workers (temporary migrant workers moving between home and host areas repetitive­ly for work) are known to be backbone of the prosperous State economies in India as also victims of growth. Migrant workers work in a wide range of economic activities like constructi­on and brick kilns, large and small industries like textiles including power looms and garments, food processing, mining and quarries, diamond cutting and polishing, engineerin­g and machine tools, salt producing units, embroidery as well as in petty trade, petty manufactur­ing and services including street vending.

Migrant workers migrate out of distress, to escape, poverty, starvation and unemployme­nt in their States/regions to survive in prosperous States/regions; while employers in prosperous regions need migrant workers not so much because enough local workers are not available but mainly because the labour market can be segmented for migrant workers to take advantage of their vulnerabil­ity to maximise profits. Migrant workers are cheap (willing to work at low wages), docile, work for long hours and accept unfavourab­le terms of work.

Apart from the Inter-State Migrant Workers Act that gives power to the States of origin and destinatio­n to protect their working and living conditions, there are laws about conditions of work (Factories Act, Contract Labour Act), wages and remunerati­ons (Minimum Wages Act), social protection (for provident funds, insurance against injury and sickness) and programmes that give them access to health, education and welfare. However, with extremely limited staff, small funds and zero if not negative political will, the implementa­tion is very poor.

In short, migrant workers, usually belonging to SC, ST, OBC groups and minorities, are highly insecure and vulnerable, and are at the lowest ladder in the labour market. They are trapped from all sides: employers want them to minimise labour costs to maximise profits; the government administra­tion is unequipped (low funding and staffing) and poorly motivated; the capitalist-feudal government sees them merely as a factor of production, and is in an unholy alliance with capital; and unions are threatened, harassed and beaten. The widely documented tragedy of migrant workers however has always been ignored by policy makers.

In the final analysis, one cannot accept migration of labour that makes rich States richer at the cost of the poor of the poor States. Also, it is essential to view labour as human beings, as no economy can prosper without human capital formation. Human capital formation in migrant workers promotes developmen­t in the States of origin as also in the States of destinatio­n.

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