South Asia Labour Resources

This a continuation of the Labour Notes South Asia (LNSA) dispatches | We also hope to build a partial archive of posts from the original LNSA mailing list (2000 to 2019) (see list URL) | See archived posts 2004-2005 | [the full webarchive of the list is now unavailable as it has been permanently removed by yahoo on Dec 2019]

Tuesday, May 30, 2023

India: Workers in high-rises earn low wages | Kathyayini Chamaraj

by Kathyayini Chamaraj

Deccan Herald,  May 30 2023

 
It is time to bring homeowners in gated communities and high-rises under the ambit of labour laws

 What is inexplicable is that neither a corrective affidavit has been filed by the labour department while the cases were pending in court, nor have the above judgements been challenged by the Labour Department through appeals for review. 

Credit: DH Illustration

What is inexplicable is that neither a corrective affidavit has been filed by the labour department while the cases were pending in court, nor have the above judgements been challenged by the Labour Department through appeals for review. Credit: DH Illustration

In the fast-mushrooming high-rise apartments and gated enclaves in urban areas, where the upper classes, including corporate honchos, are living, a gross lack of human concern is becoming largely manifest in the way the lakhs of workers working as cleaners, security guards, gardeners, etc., for the home-owners’ associations in these high-rises are being treated. The basements of these high-rises may be filled with imported luxury cars, but many of these associations are protesting when asked to pay their workers even the meagre minimum wages being fixed by the government.

Some associations are posing the following questions to deny their workers basic rights to minimum wages, rest days, overtime, etc.: "Are the other apartments on this road paying minimum wages to their workers?" "Let BBMP pay minimum wages to its PKs first, then we can also consider it". "Why should we pay them more when they are working voluntarily for these wages?" 

This same lack of concern is evident as one often finds residents of these high-rises complaining about alleged "illegal" and unsightly settlements of slum-dwellers next to their high-rises and wanting them to be evicted. Many of these enclaves may also be vociferous about supposedly "illegal" vendors and hawkers occupying the footpaths in front of their high-rises and want them evicted.

Thus, when labour inspectors filed cases against several home-owners’ associations for not following various provisions of the Minimum Wages (MW) Act with respect to their employees, the associations have promptly gone to court. They have contended that labour laws can only apply to "commercial entities" and that they are neither an 'employer' nor an ‘establishment’ as defined in the Karnataka Shops and Commercial Establishments Act, 1961, or the Contract Labour Act, etc.; and that their employees are not ‘workmen’ as defined under the above Acts, and hence, the initiation of criminal proceedings against them is wholly illegal. But this is not to deny that several RWAs are expressing concern about the lack of labour law protection for these workers.

Unfortunately, the home-owners’ associations have been strengthened in their arguments by several single-judge High Court rulings that have upheld their contentions and made the MW Act inapplicable to them in the following cases: Writ Petition Nos. 18927-18928/2013 dated 10.6.2016; Criminal Petition No. 7983/2016 dated 19.09.2019; Writ Petition No. 49553/2012 dated 10.11.2022.

The judges have relied largely on the law laid down by the Supreme Court in the case of Management of Som Vihar Apartment Owners’ Housing Maintenance Society (reported in 2001 (1) LLJ 1413), wherein it was held that "when personal services are rendered to the members of a home-owners’ society, which is not engaged in any commercial activity, its activity should not be treated as an industry nor their employees as workmen". But this was in relation to the question of whether a home-owners’ association comes under the Industrial Disputes Act and not the MW Act. But, based on this judgement, the several prosecutions instituted against home-owners’ associations for not following the MW Act have been quashed.

What appears to have been overlooked in all these cases is that the MW Act does not say that its provisions apply only to a 'commercial entity'. It has no definition of 'establishment' or 'worker,' circumscribing its applicability. The only requirement under the MW Act is that anyone who employs one or more employees in any scheduled employment in respect of which minimum rates of wages have been fixed is an ‘employer’ and is liable under the MW Act [as per Section 2(e)(iv)].

Hence, as per this definition, there are several employments scheduled by Karnataka under the MW Act that apply even to "personal service being rendered to non-commercial entities." For instance, Schedule 28, 'Employment in Domestic Work, applies to even domestic workers employed by individual householders. In fact, homeowners' associations come under Schedule 42, which has fixed minimum wages for employment in "Hostels, Guest Houses, Home-Stays, Paying Guest Accommodations, Service Apartments, Residents' Associations, Community Halls, and Marriage Halls" since 1996.
In an enlightened and progressive initiative to protect all workers engaged in any kind of employment, the labour department has also brought in Schedule 31, which applies to "employment in any unscheduled employment" and fixes a floor-level minimum wage for them! In light of these schedules, it is debatable how homeowners’ associations cannot be held liable under the MW Act. But despite the existence of these schedules, if labour inspectors file complaints against home-owners’ associations under the MW Act, they are likely to cite the court judgements and send them away.

This situation could have arisen due to a deficiency in the complaint filed by the Senior Labour Inspector, for instance, in Criminal Petition No. 7983/2016. The complaint is restricted to mentioning that the homeowners’ association has failed to implement certain sections of the MW Act and its Central Rules regarding the issue of wage slips, rest days, etc. to its workers. But the complaint does not even cite the existence and violation of the above Schedules 28, 31, or 42 of Karnataka under the MW Act.

What is inexplicable is that neither a corrective affidavit has been filed by the labour department while the cases were pending in court, nor have the above judgements been challenged by the Labour Department through appeals for review, though these judgements have reduced it to a toothless tiger! But what is intriguing is that the Labour Department has continued to issue revised notifications of minimum wages to be paid by residents' associations to their employees every year, even after the court ruled that the MW Act is not applicable to them!

According to a former labour commissioner, the "HC has erred in its judgement." He has suggested that an appeal against the above judgements is necessary and important in order to protect the rights to decent wages, standard working hours, and rest days of lakhs of these informal workers at the margins, save them from exploitation, and enable a life of dignity for them. The situation of these workers within the high-rises and gated enclaves is a classic example of why there is such growing inequality in society.

(The writer is the executive trustee of CIVIC-Bangalore)

Posted by c-info at 4:40 PM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Karnataka, Labour, Labour Law, wages

India: The rural wage rule GOI must relinquish | Jean Dreze (May 30, 2023)

Times of India, May 30, 2023

The rural wage rule GOI must relinquish
by Jean Dreze

Making Aadhaar-based payments compulsory for NREGA has severely undermined workers’ rights. Rural development ministry should retract its January 30 order:

The poor history of wage payments under the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act took another wrong turn earlier this year. On January 30, the rural development ministry issued an order making Aadhaar-based payments compulsory for all NREGA wages from February 1, 2023 – just two days later. This has led to utter chaos and worse, the injustice of unpaid NREGA work.

Until February 1, the wage payment system had two options: “account-based” and “Aadhaar-based”. The former is an ordinary bank transfer that simply requires a name, bank code and account number. The latter is an opaque and complex payment system that seeks to treat Aadhaar as a financial address. Like a precision-guided missile, it is supposed to find your latest Aadhaar-linked account on its own. How this is supposed to help, no one has clearly explained so far.

This Aadhaar-based payment system (ABPS) has no demonstrated advantage over account-based payments. If anything, it is the opposite. For instance, rejection rates are similar with both options, but rejection problems are much harder to solve with ABPS. It has baffling glitches, like wages being redirected to Airtel wallets that workers know nothing about.

Further, account-based payments spare NREGA workers the ordeal of having to meet the norms of “ABPS eligibility”. This may require them to update their Aadhaar details, get their Aadhaar number authenticated, link their bank account with Aadhaar, “align” all the relevant documents (job card, Aadhaar card, bank account, and possibly even PAN card) with each other – any or all of those.
In early February 2023, just 43% of all NREGA workers were eligible for ABPS wage payments. The ministry’s order created a situation where a majority of workers were “unpayable”. Indeed, the mandatory imposition of ABPS has caused havoc for NREGA in the last few months. In some states, job cards of ABPS-ineligible workers have been deleted en masse to help meet the target of 100% ABPS eligibility.

Frontline NREGA functionaries are at a loss to implement the new order. Mostly, they try to discourage or prevent ABPS-ineligible workers from working at NREGA worksites – a violation of their right to work. Sometimes, attendance of ineligible workers is marked “zero” after they have worked, to ensure that the collective Fund Transfer Order (FTO) is not held up. Sometimes, ineligible workers are told that FTO cannot be processed until they meet the ABPS eligibility norms. In spite of all this pressure, the proportion of NREGA workers who are eligible for ABPS is still as low as 52% today.

The worst part of this chaos is that many workers have not been paid at all for their hard work, and will never be paid. Some are held hostage to ABPS, others to the National Mobile Monitoring System, an unreliable digital-attendance app.

The ministry’s order was immediately followed by a crash in wage payments. According to the officialNREGA portal, the number of FTOs submitted for payment declined by more than 50% in February, whether one takes the preceding month (January 2023) or the same month in the preceding year (February 2022) as the baseline. The volume of wage payments also declined by more than 50%.
Perhaps this is what led the ministry to reverse gear momentarily: The February 1 deadline was extended to April 1, and then to June 1.

Wage payments resumed normal levels, but confusion and irregularities persist.
Another extension would help, but only kick the can down the road. What is really needed is a retraction of the January 30 order. There is no case for disabling the account-based option for NREGA wage payments. In fact, it is the Aadhaar-based option that should be reviewed, as it disempowers workers by putting them at the mercy of an obscure and glitch-ridden payment system that few people understand.

An impression has been created that ABPS payments are relatively corruption-proof, but there is zero evidence of that.

In fact, Aadhaar-linked accounts are especially vulnerable to fraud. If your bank account is linked with Aadhaar, and you are not careful, scamsters can easily extract money from it. Even if they lack the simple skill of cloning fingerprints, they can persuade you to put your finger in a biometric ATM under some pretext. This has happened on a large scale in the last few years. Indeed, it is one of the top fraud types listed by the National Payment Corporation of India in its updated ‘Fraud Liability Guidelines’ for Aadhaar-enabled payments.

Payment delays have plagued NREGA for more than 12 years and now there’s even the injustice of unpaid work. The rural development ministry must put in place a reliable and timely payment system once and for all. Making Aadhaar based payments compulsory is a counterproductive distraction from this basic purpose.

The writer is Visiting Professor at the Department of Economics, Ranchi University

Posted by c-info at 3:32 PM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: NREGA, wages

India: ‘Union membership to contract workers at the heart of labour struggle at Manesar’ PUDR report on Bellsonica Auto Component Pvt Ltd

 The Hindu

‘Union membership to contract workers at the heart of labour struggle at Manesar’ 

The company has a past of arbitrarily terminating workers, even before the pandemic, states People’s Union for Democratic Rights report

May 24, 2023

https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/other-states/union-membership-to-contract-workers-at-the-heart-of-labour-struggle-at-manesar/article66885502.ece

 

Posted by c-info at 7:06 AM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: automobile workers, contract labour, Labour

Monday, May 29, 2023

Workers at India’s Largest Mandi Still Paid Decades-Old Rates, Can’t Afford Vegetables | Anumeha Yadav

 

 https://thewire.in/labour/workers-at-indias-largest-mandi-still-paid-decades-old-rates-cant-afford-vegetables

Workers at India’s Largest Mandi Still Paid Decades-Old Rates, Can’t Afford Vegetables

Even after the success of farmers’ protests, mandi workers, the most vulnerable in the food and farming chain, have not seen any improvements in their lives.

Workers at India’s Largest Mandi Still Paid Decades-Old Rates, Can’t Afford Vegetables

Photos: Anumeha Yadav | Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty


Anumeha Yadav

India, among the world’s largest economies, has more than 200 million people going to bed hungry.

Chinese Construction of Waterfalls in the building 350, फीट ऊंची इमारत से बह निकला झरना - Travel Nfx
00:00

% Buffered

Copy video url
Play / Pause
Mute / Unmute
Report a problem
Language
Share
Vidverto Player
It is among the world’s top food producers; yet, it faces a chronic undernourishment crisis with 16% of its population malnourished compared to the global average of 8%. The dominant capitalist discourse enables the treatment of the symptoms of hunger with excess production, while ignoring the deeper causes of that poor diet. 

This series, ‘Made Hungry in India’, traces the structural causes of hunger and food insecurity in inequalities in power. It examines the solutions the State is offering to ask what their true meaning for people and the climate.

New Delhi: Rajkumari Devi frowned and pursed her lips looking at the heap of potatoes in front of her. She had sat cross-legged for the last eight hours on the grey concrete floor surrounded by gunny bags at the potato shed in Azadpur mandi, a wholesale fruit and vegetable market in northern Delhi, and had several hours of work to go. For every 50 kilos of potatoes Devi sorted with her hands as per their size, she earned Rs 15. On a good day, this totaled to Rs 150 or Rs 200, a third of Delhi’s minimum wage of Rs 660 a day. That day had been exceptionally hard: it was her first day back at work after her 26-year-old son, a factory worker, had died after an accidental fall 20 days earlier.

She said her husband, who pushed a cycle cart to ferry vegetables at the mandi, was weak from repeated tuberculosis infections. After their son’s death, her husband felt too broken, she explained, but they had few savings, no time to grieve, and someone had to go on. “Traders who own the wholesale potato stock sometimes allow me to take a few pieces home, free of charge. So, I came back to work,” said Devi, a tall woman in 50s, her shoulders bent from three decades of working at the market for meagre pay. “My family survives on these potatoes and the wheat from our ration card. We can barely afford anything else.”

For each 50 kg of potatoes the women workers at Azadpur mandi sort by hand as per their category and size, they are paid Rs 15. They said on average this totals Rs 150 or Rs 200 daily, a third of Delhi’s minimum wage of Rs 660 a day.

In the adjoining vegetable sale shed, 32-year-old Shiv Kumar Paswan – a head-loader or palledaar – had a slight build and piercing eyes. He said he had worked at the Azadpur mandi, India and Asia’s “largest wholesale fruit and vegetable market”, since he was 14 years old. He belongs to a landless family of a Dalit caste in Harnaut, Nalanda. He lifted vegetable loads on his back and his head seven to eight months of the year, and lived in his village in Bihar the rest of the months. Paswan said even this largesse which Devi spoke of – a few grams of vegetables at the end of sorting and lifting vegetables all day – was not available to all workers.

“If you work as a ‘parchoon’, freelance – a head-loader carrying vegetables on the back and paid at piece rate or per trip you make, and if you are not a regular at any one vegetable shed or affiliated with a trader or a commission agent – you cannot expect them to let you have even a few grams of vegetables,” Paswan said. That day since early morning, he had lifted and carried on his back 30 sacks of varying weight of 20 to 90 kg each, of drumsticks, pumpkin, gourds, carrots, spinach. For this he earned barely Rs 15 to 20 per trip.

“I cannot afford to buy and eat fruits or vegetables from these scanty amounts,” he said, explaining how workers carrying and sorting food all day for the city’s residents remained underfed, and can barely afford a decent meal.

What of workers after the farmers’ protests?

At the peak of the pandemic in 2020, tens of thousands of farmers and peasants occupied the edge of New Delhi for more than a year until the Union government was forced to repeal three new agricultural laws.

Among the laws the Modi government passed as “reforms” was one which led away from a system where farm produce is transacted at government-regulated agriculture market yards, or mandis, such as the one in Azadpur in Delhi. Modi argued that new laws to liberalise the agriculture sector would liberate the small farmers, as well as poor and low-income consumers such as Devi.

Illustration: Pariplab Chakraborty

Small farmers (over 80% of India’s farmers own less than two hectares agricultural land) opposed these changes, saying it would pauperise them, and led successful protests for withdrawal of the new laws. They were backed by some of the most marginalised, including landless daily-wage workers and palledaars who lift and sort agriculture produce in government-sanctioned market yards. They contended that the “reforms” would dismantle their livelihoods, and the amendments altering the essential food markets would make them further vulnerable to extreme rise in food prices.

More than a year after the farmers’ protests forced the government to retreat, not much has changed for mandi workers, said union representatives.

“We were at the Delhi morcha for days and joined the protests. But even after the farm laws were withdrawn, we are still fighting for changes in our pay and living conditions,” said Makhan Singh, a member of the Zameen Prapti Sangharsh Committee, which aims to improve access of landless Dalits to reserved common lands in villages, and organises piece-rate workers, palledaars, in mandis.

The unions say the protests and the accompanying discussion around farm regulations opened a space and an opportunity for actual reforms in the government-sanctioned market yards, and in the conditions of the poorest mandi workers.

“The debates from the farmers’ protests must be built upon to structurally reform the system and improve the lives of these workers,” argued Prakash Kumar, of the union National Hamal Mahapanchayat (NHP).

He stated that this would be possible through a law especially focused on mandi workers that provides essential benefits such as a weekly day off, a retirement provident fund, health and insurance cover, regulated overtime pay and safe working conditions. He added that such a law was already drafted and has been pending with the Delhi government for four years now. “The Delhi government invited public comments on the mandi workers Bill in 2019. But since then, it is in cold storage,” said Kumar. He advocated that the Delhi government pass the law to directly assist the tens of thousands of workers who sort and manually lift agricultural produce in nine government-sanctioned farm produce markets in Delhi, ensuring food and nutrition for most of northern India.

Azadpur, India’s largest wholesale market in fruits and vegetables, was set up in 1976 and meets the food needs of Delhi’s 30 million residents as well as of several northern Indian states.

Despite their vital role in the food system, the mandi workers are in a legal vacuum. Delhi’s labour department does not fix or periodically revise minimum wages for these workers, as they are not covered in 29 “schedules of employment”, or categories of work under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948. Even though several workers have worked at the same mandi for decades, and in some instances even with the same agricultural trader, labour officials described them as “self employed”.

When asked about the status of social security legislation drafted for mandi workers, additional labour commissioner S.C. Yadav refused to give an in-person interview. He directed The Wire to officials in the department’s legal division.

The officials in the legal division said the draft Bill was pending because but the Union government had passed four labour codes, including Code on Social Security, in 2020. “When we sent the Bill to the law department, they said when the Centre has made a general welfare law, then why do these workers need a special law,” said the Delhi government official. Though the Union government had passed these Codes in 2020, these are yet to be implemented and several states including Delhi are yet to frame rules to implement them. Officials had no clarity on when the Code may be enforced.

<span data-mce-type="bookmark" style="display: inline-block; width: 0px; overflow: hidden; line-height: 0;" class="mce_SELRES_start"></span>

Lifting food at starvation wages

At Azadpur, annual trade worth over Rs 12,000 crore in 45,00,000 tonnes of fruits and vegetables from several states is done in three market yards spread over 100 acres. The mandi was set up in 1976.  A body set up by the government, the Azadpur Agriculture Produce Marketing Committee (APMC), governs all its economic activities, trade as well as conditions of work at the mandi.

Union representatives and workers estimate that around 50,000 women and men work at Azadpur market, carrying, loading, unloading, stacking and weighing the farm produce. In response to a Right to Information request, the Azadpur APMC, stated that till 2021 it had recognised only 1,277 such workers, and issued “G Category” licenses to them to carry out paid work at the market yard. A vast majority of the workers work directly with the agricultural traders, the commission agents.

The workers say that they get paid a pittance and their wages are not revised periodically. Under Rule 36 of the Delhi Agriculture Produce Marketing (Regulations), 2000, the APMC is required to fix a fee or wages for the workers. But the APMC confirmed in response to a Right to Information request that it last revised these pay rates officially in 1980, now 43 years ago, even as the cost of living has gone up manifold.

With the APMC not having revised official pay rates for many years, the workers, primarily landless Dalit migrants from Bihar, have managed to negotiate piece rate hikes of only 50 paise to Re 1 a year. In potatoes, in absence of any official revision by the government, they managed to negotiate their rate of payments from Re 1.2 to only Rs 5 per sack in 40 years, even if cost of living has gone up manifold.

In 1980, for instance, the APMC had fixed that to unload a 50kg sack of potatoes, a worker would earn Rs 1.20, and for onions, Re 1. The unions and workers point out that the wages are “criminally low”, amount to exploiting the workers “akin to bonded labourers”, and are not revised because of collusion between the APMC officials and the traders – a charge which both rejected.

“It is not that we wish to starve the workers!” said Ram Baran, who heads the Potato and Onion Merchants’ Association of more than 150 wholesale produce traders, and is serving a second five-year term as a member of the APMC’s Delhi Agriculture Marketing Board.

“Though it is the government’s role to revise the pay rates, the traders revise the payment every couple of years in informal discussion with the workers,” Ram Baran told The Wire. “We usually increase their pay in alternate years – one year giving an opportunity of pay raise to the potato workers, and the next year to onion sector workers.” He gave an example: “Two-three years back, we increased the rates by Re 1 per sack for potato workers. Recently, we have been in talks with onion section workers.”

But it is obvious that the system is stacked against the workers, a majority of whom are landless migrants from Bihar, and have extremely limited bargaining power. The increase every few years which Baran mentioned consists of a mere 50 paise or Re 1 hike in a year. For instance, those working with potatoes, in the absence of any official increase by the government, have managed to negotiate their rate of payments from Rs 1.2 to only Rs 5 per sack in 40 years.

Examined along with the data on prices and inflation, Rs 1.10 in 1981 would be equivalent to Rs 16.20 now. The increase in rate of workers’ pay, which the traders’ association took credit for, is a less than one-third of what the payment rates ought to be when inflation, or rise in cost of living in the past four decades, is accounted for.

“What does it mean to earn Rs 4-5, when a kilo of wheat flour costs Rs 35? Who can survive on such terrible wages?” asked Rambilas Mahto, who is from Bihar’s Begusarai district. “Prices increase, but our wages do not. If we try to organise, the traders give us death threats; they ask, what is your motive, why are you speaking up.”

Mahto has carried head-loads of vegetables at the mandi for 35 years, including in 5-10-year continuous stretches for the same trader. He said in over three decades of work, in his memory, he had seen rates of pay for workers revised only four to five times. “They pay us Rs 5 for unloading a sack of potatoes from the trucks and if they need to weigh the gunny bags, they pay us an additional Rs 4,” he said.

Anil Kumar, a migrant from Khargaria in Bihar who has also worked as a palledaar manually carrying sacks of potato for over 30 years, said that in November 2019, the potato merchants had increased the workers pay by 50 paise, and before that they had done so – also by 50 paise – in 2016. “How it happened is that around 500 of us working in the potato sheds talked among ourselves and stopped work for a few hours. Following this there were negotiations, and the traders hiked the pay rate. But by merely a few paise,” he explained. “When we stop work and the trade profits suffer, they say things such as, ‘From now on we will consult you.’ But then it goes back to the same.”

He continued, “They don’t even speak to us as if we are humans. They call us out shouting “Abey” or “Oye”. They shun using our names even if we have worked in the same shed with them over 30 years.

They fear addressing us by name will lead to us being identified as working for them, and to them being accountable to us as employers.”

“The well of death”

On an afternoon in May, as the temperature turned 42 degrees, a scorching sun bore down from the skies and the ground underneath radiated heat.

Work goes on at the mandi 24 hours, in two shifts. Even at the hottest hour of the day, the roads were packed with men, women, hand-carts, lorries and trucks. Women crouched on the ground sorted produce by hand, or made stacks in the shade of parked trucks. The men in loose clothing with their head and shoulders covered with a towel or a scarf pulled narrow, long carts laden with dozens of gunny bags filled with produce. A few walked, carrying sacks on their backs, or on their heads, or carried the gunny bags on their backs walking up slabs of wood placed on the floor of the large sheds where vegetables were stacked into the trucks.

“I weigh 40 kg, but I lift 90 kg!” said Rajbalam Paswan, a young man who had dark eyes and sunken cheeks. Paswan, like several other parchoon workers – paid from task to task – belongs to a landless family of a Dalit caste from Chakhawan in Bihar’s Nalanda district. He recounted that he had followed his older brother into this work. On his back, he wore a pitthoo hand-made from pieces of gunny bags as protection. Without it, the heavy loads he lifted through the day would peel skin off his back. “Palledars like us are the cattle of these markets,” said Paswan.

Rajbalam Paswan, a landless Dalit worker from Chakhawan in Bihar’s Nalanda district who followed his older brother into this work, said he could not afford to eat vegetables, pulses or meats. He said doing this strenuous work, he lost weight year after year.

For categories of labour for which the government fixes minimum wages, the 15th Indian Labour Conference (an annual event organised by the Ministry of Labour and Employment to decide on workers’ issues) of 1957, recommended fixing minimum wages based on per capita food intake of at least 2,700 calories for a worker’s family of three members. The National Institute of Nutrition recommends that those doing “heavy work” such as the men and women doing manual in the mandi, need access to even higher, 2,850-3,490 calories a day, including 55 to 60 gram a day of protein, 20-25 gram fat, 600 milligrams a day of calcium.

When asked how often he ate vegetables or fruits in meals, Paswan simply shook his head. In the last ten years doing the back-breaking work, he said, he saw himself lose weight year after year.

Ramashray Paswan, 55, a head-loader who had come to Azadpur in 1987, was working a second shift. He had started unloading gunny bags at 11 pm the previous night. It was now 4 pm. It had been 17 hours of work, with a short break for a meal of rice and soya, he recounted. His eyes were red, he looked worn out. Paswan recounted that he had worked all his life as a parchoon, and then the last two months, he had found a chance to work affiliated with a particular trader or agent who would pay Rs 5 per sack for a bulk of sacks in a truck. But this did not mean a regular income. “Today no new produce trucks have come in, and the trader will make no payment. So, I started carrying and loading gunny bags as a parchoon at night and worked until now,” he said.

“It is difficult manual labour,” said Dhanraj Paswan, who was taking a few minutes’ break sitting atop gunny bags of onions he had stacked for over the past 10 hours. “The way earth dries up, our bodies too get dry and parched in the heat.”

The head-loaders explained how they carried excessively heavy loads, much more than 50 kg, which was the government norm for weight permitted in the gunny bags. The workers said that traders who pay per piece of a gunny bag of produce had an incentive to fill each bag with more at the same price. “The merchants claim that the sacks contain 50 kg. But in fact, they stuff 55- 60 kg produce in one bag, or several kg extra,” said Jorawar, who is over 55 years old and has continued the work despite walking with a limp for the last five years. “We have carried these loads for years. We know what a 50 kg sack feels like. They force us to carry sacks that are 10-15 kg heavier.”

Most palledar workers who carry loads of 50 to even 90 kg on their backs wore a pitthoo hand-made from pieces of gunny bags as protection. Without it, the heavy loads lifted through the day would peel skin off their backs, they said.

The market traders’ association pointed to tin roofs over the produce sheds and water outlets that had been provided as conveniences for the workers. But government doctors in the area told The Wire that mandi workers continued to suffer heat strokes as the rate of evaporation was higher compared to the rate of replenishment of their bodies with water and nutrients.

“The workers who visit the clinic often complain of haraarat fevers, muscle and joint pain. Nasal bleeding, which is a minor trauma, is frequent,” said a doctor at a local mohalla government clinic in Azadpur, who treats 3,000-3,500 individuals every month, living and working around the market yard and wanted to remain anonymous. He said though most workers were in the working age population, from their late teens to the 50s, several 60- to 72-year-old older workers continued even as the heavy loads sapped them and weakened their bones. “Arthritis is common among the workers, and also back pain, osteoarthritis, prolapsed discs.”

He said that though he recommended they eat calcium and protein-based foods, treating this population of some of the city’s poorest workers over the past two years, he had understood that they would not be able to follow through with his prescriptions. “For joint pains etc. for instance, I instruct them to have cholecalciferol granules with a glass of milk. Then, often, they ask me, ‘Can we take it with water instead?’ Milk is a luxury good to them.”

He confirmed that those doing this difficult manual labour badly need protein-based foods, but these remained out of reach. “Milk-based proteins and animal-based proteins are costlier than regular food. They become khinn bhinn – malnourished – their muscle mass gets consumed and their bodies’ protein reserves are depleted.”

He stated that on the other end of the spectrum, among the workers battling hunger and scarcity daily, he saw an increasing dependence on alcohol. A few who found the stress, the abuse, the load of the hard manual work and scanty and inadequate food too exhausting had taken to alcohol, further increasing their chance of illness and early death.

The mandi workers frequently lift or push loads in excess of the norms. To even maintain their health, they need milk or animal-based proteins, say health experts, but they can barely afford these and so become under-nourished.

Excluded voices

Prakash Kumar, of the union National Hamal Mahapanchayat, pointed out that when the APMC authorities failed to issue licenses to even one-tenth of the workers labouring at the mandi, this created a void in regulation. With this, he alleged, the APMC officials tacitly permitted the traders or the commission agents – called so as they earn a “commission” of 6% on the sale of agricultural produce – to directly hire the workers and dictate exploitative terms and conditions of work. “Under the law, the workers are hired by the government,” said Kumar. “In practice, they are often hired directly by the commission agents or the traders, arhatiya. But the agents show them as self-employed, even as they frequently require them to work 24 hours, like bonded labourers.”

Over the years, the mandi workers have been sidelined from having a legal say in their terms of work or pay. Section 36(e) of the Delhi APMC Act provides that one member of the marketing committee of the mandi is “to be elected by licensed weigh-men and measurers”. Kumar pointed out that in 1998, under the previous Congress government, this provision meant to include workers’ voices in the market’s administration was removed from applying to “agricultural markets of national importance”, such as Azadpur.

Thus, for markets with size and volume of agricultural trade above a certain threshold, workers’ representation would no longer apply. The result is, in Azadpur, with over 50,000 workers as per unions’ estimates, workers have no representatives in the body governing the market, even as several workers recounted working round the clock at the traders’ beck and call.

In the potato sheds, the head-loader workers had hung their washed clothes to dry and had plates and cooking utensils stacked in corners next to the stacks of packed produce. In the onion shed, the workers, overworked, exhausted from the heat and lacking even a bed, lay on top of gunny bags of onions to catch a nap.

The workers said they felt pressured to guard the gunny bags overnight even as they had no fixed pay, as their piece rate payments varied based on how many trucks arrived, going to zero if no new produce had arrived that day. “If a single gunny bag goes missing, or even if stray cattle eat part of the produce, it will be deducted from our piece-rate pay,” said a worker, Mohammad Gulzar.

Mandi workers recounted working round the clock at the traders’ beck and call. In the onion shed, the workers overworked, exhausted from the heat and lacking even a bed, lay on top of gunny bags of onions to catch a nap.

Mandeep Sahu, one of the workers, explained how they worked around the clock: “Trucks laden with the agriculture produce come here all through the night. For example, the Zaheerabad season – of a potato variety from Telangana from 3,000 km away – was on and those trucks would start arriving at 11 at night and continue till 3 am,” said Sahu. “When a truck arrives at the yard gate, the trader starts calling us on the phone, telling us to get up and unload the trucks.”

He continued: “Then at 4 am, we start stacking the vegetable bags out, presenting the samples for buyers. If a buyer comes at any time early in the morning, the trader asks us to take the stock out.”

“Sometimes they will ask to lift several sacks to take a few particular varieties – for instances, in potato there is Naya aloo, Chandausi, Chipsona – from the back of the trucks,” said Sahu. “It is very risky work as you are sleep deprived, exhausted and can even get crushed under the bags if not alert.”

APMC officials who spoke to The Wire responded that the legal changes over the years were made “to prevent cartelisation of labour” and that most traders preferred to privately hire workers, rather than work with those the mandi administration provided licenses to.

“Earlier, many times large cartels of workers would form and they would make the agricultural produce rot to press for their demands. They caused a lot of problems,” said APMC deputy secretary M.L. Pushkar. “The administration aims to have checks and balances.”

Pushkar added that though elections were held, a market committee had not officially been notified since December 2022. However, the APMC had earlier this year convened a meeting with various agricultural commodity associations to discuss wage revisions. “When asked about the wages, the traders submitted that workers approved of the wage rates. Even the minutes of the meeting mention that all labour associations are happy and they are getting good wages.”

He concluded, “A problem will show only if there is a problem, right? But there is none.”

Anumeha Yadav is an independent journalist reporting on labour and rural policy.

All photos by Atul Ashok Howale and Anumeha Yadav.

Posted by c-info at 6:18 PM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: Labour, wages

India: Too few jobs, too many workers and ‘no plan B’ | Tara Subramaniam and Sania Farooqui (CNN)

cnn

Too few jobs, too many workers and ‘no plan B’: The time bomb hidden in India’s ‘economic miracle’

Tara Subramaniam
By Tara Subramaniam and Sania Farooqui, CNN
Published 7:39 PM EDT, Sat May 27, 2023
India gains global new title as China's population declines
02:34 - Source: CNN
New Delhi CNN  — 

Sunil Kumar knows all about working hard to achieve a dream. The 28-year-old from India’s Haryana state already has two degrees – a bachelor’s and a master’s – and is working on a third, all with a view to landing a well-paid job in one of the world’s fastest growing economies.

“I studied so that I can be successful in life,” he said. “When you work hard, you should be able to get a job.”

Kumar does now have a job, but it’s not the one he studied for – and definitely not the one he dreamed about.

He has spent the past five years sweeping the floors of a school in his village, a full-time job he supplements with a less lucrative side hustle tutoring younger students. All told, he makes about $85 a month.

It’s not much, he concedes, especially as he needs to support two aging parents and a sister, but it is all he has. Ideally, he says, he’d work as a teacher and put his degrees to use. Instead, “I have to do manual labor just to be able to feed myself.”

Kumar’s situation is not unusual, but a predicament faced by millions of other young Indians. Youth unemployment in the country is climbing sharply, a development that risks undermining the new darling of the world economy at the very moment it was expected to really take off.

Advertisement

India’s newfound status as the world’s most populous nation had prompted hopes of a youthful new engine for the global economy just as China’s population begins to dwindle and age. Unlike China’s, India’s working age population is young, growing, and projected to hit a billion over the next decade – a vast pool of labor and consumption that one Biden administration official has called an “economic miracle.”

But for young Indians like Kumar, there’s a flip side to this so-called miracle: too few jobs and too much competition.

Sunil Kumar, 28, is frustrated about what he sees as a lack of opportunities.
Sunil Kumar, 28, is frustrated about what he sees as a lack of opportunities.
Vijay Bedi/CNN

From ‘miracle’ to disillusion

In contrast to China, where economists fear there won’t be enough workers to support the growing number of elderly, in India the concern is there aren’t enough jobs to support the growing number of workers.

While people under the age of 25 account for more than 40% of India’s population, almost half of them – 45.8% – were unemployed as of December 2022, according to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy (CMIE), an independent think tank headquartered in Mumbai, which publishes job data more regularly than the Indian government.

Some analysts have described the situation to CNN as a “time bomb”, warning of the potential for social unrest unless more employment can be created.

Kumar, like others in his position, knows all too well the frustrations that can build when work is scarce.

“I get very angry that I don’t have a successful job despite my qualifications and education,” he said. “I blame the government for this. It should give work to its people.”

LUCKNOW, INDIA - MARCH 2: Huge crowd of shoppers gathered at Aminabad market ahead of Holi on March 2, 2023 in Lucknow, India. (Photo by Deepak Gupta/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)

India will surpass China as world's most populous country by mid-year, UN says

The bad news for people like Kumar, and the Indian government, is that experts warn the problem will only get worse as the population grows and competition for jobs gets even tougher.

Kaushik Basu, an economics professor at Cornell University and former chief economic adviser for the Indian government, described India’s youth unemployment rate as “shockingly high.”

It’s been “climbing slowly for a long time, say for about 15 years it’s been on a slow climb but over the past seven, eight years it’s been a sharp climb,” he said.

“If that category of people do not find enough employment,” Basu added, “then what was meant to be an opportunity, the bulge in that demographic dividend, could become a huge challenge and problem for India.”

‘There’s competition everywhere’

To be clear, it’s not all doom and gloom.

Economists say India has various options to address these demographic problems – among them, developing an already globally competitive and labor-intensive manufacturing sector, which accounted for less than 15% of employment in 2021, according to Capital Economics, a relatively low amount.

But such fixes on the macro level will do little to help those who are struggling now. Students like high-schooler Megha Kumari, who must take ever more extreme measures to get an edge on the competition.

Kumari, 17, has left her hometown of Dumka, in the eastern state of Jharkhand, to study at the Vibrant Academy in Kota, a city in the northern state of Rajasthan – more than 800 miles (1,300 kilometers) away.

The academy is one of several such centers across India where students hoping to qualify for top-tier colleges go to augment the regular high school curriculum with extra exam prep courses and tutoring sessions.

FILE PHOTO: People shop in a crowded market amidst the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Kolkata, India, January 6, 2022. REUTERS/Rupak De Chowdhuri/File Photo

How India's population exploded to overtake China's and what's next

Kumari sees it as her best chance of realizing her dream of becoming a professor, but it comes at great cost, financially and personally.

In a country where the average salary for regular full-time workers is around $225 per month, according to the most recent government figures, tuition fees for one year at the academy range from around $145 to $1,872.

Kumari said she also keenly misses the support her family used to provide.

“The environment is actually really competitive,” Kumari said. “Living alone and away from family and going through all that stress is hard for a student.”

Her situation, too, is not unusual.

“Since childhood, we’ve been facing this competition,” said Sarang Agrawal, 28, who is studying for the Indian civil service entrance test.

“In India, there’s competition in every exam. There’s competition everywhere.”

Sarang Agrawal (center) is studying in the hope of becoming a civil servant.
Sarang Agrawal (center) is studying in the hope of becoming a civil servant.
Vijay Bedi/CNN

No social life, no love life … and no plan B

Like Kumar and Kumari, Agrawal knows all about competition. He is among the more than 1 million people who apply each year for a position in the Indian civil service.

It’s one of the country’s most highly sought-after jobs and, with less than 1% of applicants making the cut, a whole industry has grown up around helping people get their hands on what they see as a golden ticket.

“As the population has increased, the competition has increased, so people’s chances have reduced,” said Madhusudan, who goes by only one name and is the director of content and strategy at Study IQ, a tuition center specializing in helping people study for the civil service entrance exam.

India’s youth, he says, are feeling the pressure.

“You can see the stress level is very high these days among the students. Students come to me and say ‘Sir, I’m not able to sleep,’” Madhusudan said.

There’s precious little time for anything to defuse the tension – “No social life, no love life,” as Agrawal put it, “but at least we have a goal.”

Still, in this most competitive of markets, even the most driven are tested to their limits.

Agrawal has taken the civil service exam four times without success. Continuing with his dream is costing his family dearly, to the tune of around $3,000 a year when tuition fees, food and housing are taken into account.

“They could have bought three to four cars with the money they spent on me,” said Agrawal, who feels he has no other option but to keep trying.

“There’s no such Plan B,” he said.

 

Posted by c-info at 4:59 PM
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Labels: employment, Labour, unemployment
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Blog Archive

  • ►  2024 (16)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  March (8)
    • ►  February (3)
    • ►  January (4)
  • ▼  2023 (48)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (2)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  July (2)
    • ►  June (7)
    • ▼  May (10)
      • India: Workers in high-rises earn low wages | Kath...
      • India: The rural wage rule GOI must relinquish | J...
      • India: ‘Union membership to contract workers at th...
      • Workers at India’s Largest Mandi Still Paid Decade...
      • India: Too few jobs, too many workers and ‘no plan...
      • India: West Bengal Migrant Workers’ Welfare Board ...
      • Sri Lanka’s tea pickers say they go hungry and liv...
      • India: Deaths and injuries due to workplace accide...
      • Hard Times For Pakistan’s Working Classes | Abdul ...
      • Video report: Jharia, Dhanbad in the Coal belt is ...
    • ►  April (6)
    • ►  March (5)
    • ►  February (8)
    • ►  January (4)
  • ►  2022 (36)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  September (4)
    • ►  August (7)
    • ►  July (3)
    • ►  June (4)
    • ►  May (2)
    • ►  April (2)
    • ►  February (7)
    • ►  January (5)
  • ►  2020 (22)
    • ►  April (10)
    • ►  March (12)
  • ►  2018 (1)
    • ►  March (1)
  • ►  2017 (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2016 (3)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  January (1)
Simple theme. Powered by Blogger.