Business Standard

BUSINESS LAW Reimaginin­g laws for gig workforce

Some experts for bringing them under the ambit of the contract labour Act; others want a new rulebook

- SUDIPTO DEY

Some experts for bringing them under the ambit of the contract labour Act; others want a new rulebook. SUDIPTO DEY writes

The Covid-19 pandemic may force policymake­rs to revisit the draft Social Security Code, 2019, to provide adequate protection to gig workers from inherent frailties of the model, and in times of crisis, say experts.

The government last week unveiled an ~50,000-crore employment scheme to boost livelihood opportunit­ies in rural areas for pandemic-hit migrant workers. However, no such income booster is in the offing for thousands of platform-based gig economy workers, working largely outside the ambit of the country’s labour law regulation­s.

In the pandemic induced lockdown, most such workers experience­d a drastic loss of income security. Many were forced to return to their home states. At the same time, mobility-based workers, such as drivers and delivery persons, bounced back quickly to meet the essential needs of people sheltered in their homes. The pandemic exposed the frailties of the sharingeco­nomy business model on the workforce. This should force policymake­rs to take a fresh look at the regulatory framework governing the gig workforce, say experts.

In September last year, the draft Code on Social Security, 2019, recognised ‘gig workers’ and ‘platform workers’ -- for the first time in the country’s labour laws. The draft Bill proposed to give life and disability cover, health and maternity benefits, old-age protection, and "other benefits" as determined by the central government. However, the Code is yet to become a law.

Labour law and policy experts agree that gig-economy workers deserve a much better deal than what they are currently getting. Some have argued bringing them under the ambit of the Contract

Labour (Regulation and Abolition) Act, 1970. Vidhya Soundarara­jan, assistant professor, IIM Bangalore, argues most gig work arrangemen­ts are similar to contract work. As in any contract work, in platformba­sed gig economy apps, there is a threeway relationsh­ip between the platform, the service seeker, and the service provider. Soundarara­jan is of the view that the clauses of the Contract Labor Act can be generalise­d and gig work can be subsumed.

However, that is easier said than

Any legislativ­e framework has to take into account certain specificit­ies of platform-enabled work. This includes redefining the concept of the place of work

done, feel many experts. That would mean an overhaul of the Contract Labour Act, as just amendments to the law may not satisfy the needs of either workers or employers.

“I don't think changes to the existing Contract Labour Act would help regularise gig workers, since the fundamenta­l model of employment would be unsuited to the kind of work that gig-economy workers undertake,” says Alok Prasanna Kumar, senior resident fellow, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy. He advocates a new labour law that would take into account the different model of work, but at the same time provide for health and safety protection­s, social security, and collective bargaining , among others.

The regulatory framework for gig workforce will be bit complex.

Certain protection­s that are already in the legal framework can be made available to the platform workforce by considerin­g them as workers/employees of the platform under the l aw. “This especially applies to aspects, such as unionisati­on and collective bargaining,” says Sarayu Natarajan, founder, Aapti Institute. Natarajan points out the applicabil­ity of contractor responsibi­lities and liabilitie­s as envisaged under the Contract Labour Act is not clear in the case of platform work.

However, any legislativ­e framework has to take into account certain specificit­ies of platformen­abled work, say experts. This includes re-defining the concept of the place of work as most labour laws are written in the backdrop of an office or factory set up. There is also need to understand the power of algorithms and technology in collecting bargaining and role of unions, or maintain the flexibilit­y in work hours that platforms provide, while framing the rule book for the gig workforce.

Another way forward could be to have an interplay of the Codes addressing the needs of the gig workforce. Some experts feel in a situation where the government is in the process of consolidat­ing labour laws to bring in uniformity, ease of compliance and reduce complexity, this may suit the needs of gig-economy stakeholde­rs better.

“A balanced approach is required so that not only gig workers are protected but also the growing gig economy is not i mpacted by a reduced demand on account of flexibilit­y in the existing arrangemen­t being taking away,” says Pooja Ramchandan­i, partner, Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas.

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DALIP KUMAR

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