Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Minimum pay may jump 28% on govt’s wage code

- Zia Haq letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

ACCORDING TO THE WAGE CODE DRAFT, A CENTRAL BOARD WILL FIX A FLOOR WAGE WHICH WILL NEED TO BE FOLLOWED FEDERALLY AS WELL AS IN STATES

NEW DELHI: The national minimum floor wage in the country could go up by 28% from an existing non-binding guideline wage set in 2017 based on new criteria proposed by the Union government, which has framed draft rules to operationa­lise the Code on Wages 2019, according to calculatio­ns by multiple experts.

The draft says that a central advisory board will fix a statutory national floor wage for the first time, which will be the basis for new, multiple minimum wages at the federal and state levels. The Code on Wages 2019 provides for a statutory national floor wage rate, below which no minimum wages can be fixed by any state body or employer. The draft will be finalised in about four months after public consultati­ons and suggestion­s.

While the criteria for the floor wage have been left to an advisory board, the draft lays down the guidelines for fixing minimum wages.

According to Prof KR Shyam Sundar of the Xavier Labour Relations Institute, Jamshedpur, the floor wage calculated by following the laid-out criteria should stand between ~200 and ~225 per day, a raise of 14% to 28% when compared with the existing highest minimum wage of ~175 per day in some states. The draft rules provide for ninehour working shifts.

To be sure, the 7th Pay Commission in 2015 prescribed a minimum wage of ~18,000 per month for all central government employees. For a 26-day working month, this works out to ~692 a day. “The 7th Pay Commission recommenda­tion setting the minimum salary at ~18,000 will be the notional basis for the criteria hiking the floor wage,” an official of labour ministry said.

According to the criteria, actual minimum wages must take into account a net intake of “2,700 calories per day per consumptio­n unit” and “66 metres cloth per year per family”, apart from house rent (10% of minimum wages), fuel, household electricit­y, spending on children’s education, medical needs, and recreation. Expenditur­e on emergencie­s will constitute 25% of the minimum wages.

The floor wage will take into account “an equivalent of three adult consumptio­n units”, including “food, clothing, housing and any other factors considered appropriat­e by the central government from time to time”, the draft states.

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