New Delhi: The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Labour has supported the idea of allowing companies having less than 300 workers to go for retrenchment or closure without government permission.
This proposal has been the bone of contention at tripartite discussions on the Industrial Relation Code and attracted criticism especially from trade unions.
The committee in its report on the proposed Industrial Relation Code 2019 submitted to the Lok Sabha Speaker earlier this week stated, "Threshold be increased accordingly in the Code itself and the words ''as may be notified by the Appropriate Government'' be removed because reform of labour laws through the executive route is undesirable."
The committee noted in the report that some state governments like Rajasthan have already increased the threshold to 300 workers, which according to the Labour Ministry has resulted in an increase in employment and a decrease in retrenchment.
The bill provided in Clause 77 (1) that the special provisions relating to lay-off, retrenchment and closure shall apply to an industrial establishment having not less than 100 workers or such number of workers as may be notified by the Appropriate Government.
An earlier draft of the Bill had proposed 300 workers threshold which had to be removed in the latest bill after strong opposition by trade unions.
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The panel had also recommended that a time limit of 45 days be prescribed to process and finalise the application for registration of a trade union irrespective of the outcome of the scrutiny of the application.
The panel has taken a liberal view on strikes and recognised it as freedom of industrial action.