Migrant
Workers Certainly Need More Attention
Jawhar Sircar
(1st October, 2020,New Indian Express)
Of the three labour bills passed by Parliament
recently, one has a special dispensation for unorganised workers, who have
surely been neglected by successive governments. The utter chaos and
largely-avoidable pain that migrant labourers, inter-state or intra-state,
suffered after the sudden announcement of nation-wide lockdown in March this
year is still fresh in people’s minds. Governments at the centre and in the
states hardly have any updated records on who is a migrant worker and where
exactly he is working at present. The well-meaning legislation of 1979 called the Inter-State
Migrant Workmen (Regulation of Employment and Conditions of Service) Act failed
India rather miserably in its hour of crises.
One
expected, therefore, that both unorganised workers and their most vulnerable
part, the inter-state migrant workers, would be dealt with more sensitivity.
After all, the latest labour legislations may be the final ones for several
years to come. We cannot blame only the government as these labour codes were
finally screened and vetted by the multi-party parliamentary standing committee
— but this was before Covid. Since inter-state migrants can not vote in their
guest states, unless they are long-time residents, political parties may have lesser interest in these birds of
passage. The terms ‘unorganised’ and ‘migrant labourers’ are, of course, not
coterminous but the largest large chunk
of migrant workers belong to the unorganised category. The 2011 census located 5.6 crore migrant
labourers, while the Finance Minister’s estimate was 8 crores.
The 1979
Act just fell through the crack as the labour ministry’s machinery was
overburdened with labour legislations benefitting the more demanding organised
sector and could not prepare a comprehensive database of unorganised and
migrant workers. But studies show that the organised part is only 10 percent of
the total work force and the unorganised account for 90 percent. Within this 90
percent, not even the voluminous report of the Arjun Sengupta Committee on “Conditions of Work and
Promotion of Livelihoods in the Unorganised Sector” of 2007 could locate the
very fickle percentage of migrants. If we extrapolate its numbers, we find that
unorganised workers may account for some 53.8 crores at
present and organised workers are just above 6 crores — within India’s present estimated population of 138
crores, Yet, even the latest labour codes focus almost entirely on the 10
percent in the organised sector, as always. Perhaps, the deadline of getting
the laws passed in the monsoon session of parliament meant that it was too late
to insert special provisions for migrants labour.
The latest Occupational Safety, Health
and Working Conditions Code does, of course, have a promising chapter on
unorganised workers. But it is all couched in so much bureaucratese that only
lawyers or touts can navigate the system. Section 112 of this Code provides for
settling up ‘workers’ facilitation centres’ to assist them but we have many
such pious intentions strewn all over our law books. We are not sure what
happened to the labour ministry’s intention to undertake a census of workers in
the unorganised sector announced in 2015. It promised to assign them unique
identity cards, linked to Aadhar, for getting social security benefits, health
insurance and old age pension. Frankly, unorganised workers really require
class an exclusive labour law, instead
of being boxed into the new Code dedicated to the organised sector. Or, at
least its migrant workers surely warrant special attention. Incidentally, while
almost all the major old labour Acts have been subsumed by the new Code, the
failed Inter-State Migrant Workmen’s Act of 1979 has not been
tackled.
Nevertheless, we can still make a start by with electronic registration
of migrant labourers and section 111 of
the Code provides for this option. Since they are always moving around, a unique
QR or even better code can easily be inserted (as for digital phone payments)
and their current location determined by any smartphone. At the next place, the
same location identification process can be repeated. This means that the
previously insurmountable problem of locating a migrant worker can finally be
tackled. Emergency relief in the form of direct cash benefit and food from
ration shops under the Pradhan Mantri Garib Kalyan Anna Yojana could surely be
linked to this coded card. For additional verification, the migrant worker’s
fingerprint could also be read by a smartphone. Of course, all such workers
would not need to purchase or keep a smartphone, but they can access any one of
the 50 crore smartphones available with every second adult in India — only to
mark his current location and address.
This
labour welfare Code provides for a lot of benefits but these can only be
implemented only when funds are available or the proposed cess is levied. Our
major overriding concern is, however, to ensure that some identification system
is in position so that if a nation-wide or regional crisis ever befalls us
again, migrant labourers do not go through living hell again. If only we knew
who was where after 25th March, relief could be rushed to them there, as soon
as intentions and schemes were finalised. Most of them may actually have stayed
back in their place of work and not scrambled to leave for home at any cost.
Besides, migrants returning home may not have taken Covid 19 from urban
habitats so deep into rural India.
(Please Click Here to Read the article On New IndianExpress Website)
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