The Supreme Court of India gave a progressive judgement directing the garment manufacturing company Godavari garments to pay Provident Fund dues of 1 million Indian rupees to Home based women workers employed by them within a month. #Thread: uk.reuters.com/article/india-…
In the case from 1991, the PF office issued a notice to Godavari garments (Govt of Maharashtra undertaking) to pay Provident Fund contributions for its women workers under Section 2(f) of the EPF Act after it was revealed that the Company defaulted on salary payments.
The Company argued that home-based women workers could not be classified as “employees” because
-Sewing machines not owned by company
-They worked at home and not Co. production centers
-Co. had no supervisory control over them
In the SC ruling Justices Indu malhotra & Abhay Sapre said, “employee” under Section 2(f) is an inclusive definition, and includes workers who are engaged either directly or indirectly in connection with the work of the establishment, and are paid wages”. #HomeBasedWorkers
“Merely because the women workers were permitted to do the work off site, would not take away their status as employees of the Respondent Company” the judgement reads.'
This judgement would have a positive impact for millions of invisible home-based workers in accessing their social security benefits say activists. @ShaliniWIEGO of @WIEGOGLOBAL said judgement “acknowledges the home as a workplace and women working from home as employees
Home based workers are workers who carry out remunerative work in their own homes or adjacent grounds or premises- eg. stitching garments, weaving, crafts; making food, assembling/ packaging electronics, automobile parts, pharma products #HomeBasedWorkers
There are 2 types of home-based work:
-Self-employed: independent self-employed workers who take entrepreneurial risks.
-Sub-contracted: dependent on a firm or its contractors for work orders, supply of raw materials and sale of finished goods. #HomeBasedWorkers
There are about 37.4 million home-based workers making up 15% of non-agricultural workforce ((NSSO 2011-12). These are under reported numbers say activists.
Home-based work has been an especially important source of employment for women- 31.7% of women in non-agricultural work were engaged in home-based work.
For women home based workers, there are several challenges acc to a study
-Lack of basic infrastructure services-the high cost and irregular supply of electricity
-cover many costs and absorb many risks of production
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-irregular purchase/work orders, irregular supply of raw materials, and delayed payments
-Unfavourable bargaining position coz of information asymmetry
-Low and unstable earnings and high risks and expenditures
Parliament passed 3 new Farm Bills
-The Farmers Agreement on Price Assurance and Farm Services Bill
- Farming Produce, Trade, Commerce (Promotion and Facilitation) Bill
- Essential Commodities (Amendment) Bill
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'Contract farming' rules with agri businesses w/o the intervention of middlemen hampers women farmers’ collective bargaining power at local mandis to ensure fair prices.
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Cutting out middlemen who also act as 'informal bankers' dries up an important source of credit for women farmers who have limited access to institutional credit. An Oxfam study in UP observed less than 4% women have institutional credit access.
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#Thread How draft rules Code of Wages Bill affect women workers
Govt of India released draft rules of the Code of wages Bill in July 2020. 1/10 #LabourReforms
Feminist economists and activists say the rules are patriarchal and exclusionary in a consultation by @OxfamIndia. Major points follow 2/10 #LabourReforms
The framing in the Code of Wages Bill is exclusionary of other genders. The definition of worker and workplace is male. This also excludes Transgender persons. The wage slip & Form VI to write the Sex/Gender of the person is missing. 3/10 #LabourReforms
GoI proposed changes to Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act under section 10 2(c) and 10 2(b) of the, to pave the way for auctioning of around 500 potential leases. A #thread on what this means for women in mining areas. 1/13
Govt's proposed reform, under the Atmanirbhar Bharat Scheme, aims to enhance private investment in the sector.
They also aim to increase mineral production and employment, developing a transparent National Mineral Index and clarifying the definition of illegal mines.
The struggles of single women have increased during the lockdown with lack of basic facilities, loss of employment, and increased mental health issues. Yet, they are not recognised in covid support schemes. 1/10
Single women face violation of basic human rights and lack the support they need as society perpetuates a patriarchal norm. They are neither a homogeneous group, and have several intersections that exacerbate their struggle. 2/10
There was a 39% increase in the number of single women – widows, never married, divorced, abandoned from 5.1 crore women in 2001 to 7.1 crore in 2011, according to census data. widows constitute only 18% of the single women. 3/10
1.Withdraw privatization proposals of basic services- health , nutrition (including ICDS and MDMS)
2.Make the Centrally Sponsored Schemes - ICDS, NHM, MDMS permanenent 3. Regularization of scheme workers as workers
1. 4000 as Covid pay 2. Declaration and status as health workers and permanent staff 3. Govt empanelled hospital facilities for treatment of Asha workers
From #Asha workers protest in Haryana.
Pic courtesy: Asha workers Union, Haryana
Image decrpition: ASHA worker holding a placard that reads ' its not for fun we strike. We strike because it is necessary"