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Explained: The four labour codes and what they mean for India's workforce

The four labour codes that aimed to streamline and simplify existing laws have drawn mixed responses. While they have been welcomed by industry as a spur to employment generation, trade unions and opposition parties view them as being anti-labour and heavily tilted in favour of employers.

November 24, 2020 / 16:07 IST
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India's Parliament, in the last monsoon session, passed three labour codes - the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, the Code on Social Security, 2020 and the Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 amidst massive criticism and protests, especially in northern parts of the country. In the monsoon session last year, it also passed the Code on Wages. Together, these four codes merged 44 pre-existing labour laws.

The government introduced the codes aiming to streamline and simplify the country's existing and overlapping labour laws. Since the subject of labour comes under the Concurrent List of the Constitution, there were hundreds of state and central labour laws.

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While the industry and employers have welcomed the labour codes for spurring employment and the overall business environment, labour unions and opposition parties across the country have strongly critiqued the labour codes calling them highly anti-worker and pro-employer in nature.

What are the key proposals in the four labour codes?