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India’s wage regulations were previously governed by four separate laws: the Payment of Wages Act (1936), the Minimum Wages Act (1948), the Payment of Bonus Act (1965), and the Equal Remuneration Act (1976). These laws often overlapped, contained inconsistent definitions, particularly concerning “wages,” and created significant administrative complexities for businesses. For instance, the definition of “wages” varied across the acts, leading to confusion in calculating dues like overtime pay, bonuses, and provident fund contributions. Some acts included certain allowances while others excluded them.

To address these issues, the Code on Wages, 2019 was enacted, consolidating all four previous legislations into a single, unified framework. This new law aims to bring about uniformity, simplification, and ease of compliance across all industries and states in India. A key feature of the Code is its unified and detailed definition of “wages,” which generally includes basic pay, dearness allowance, and retaining allowance, while specifically excluding items like bonus, house rent allowance, overtime pay, conveyance allowance, and certain commissions, subject to a rule capping allowances at 50% of total remuneration. This standardized definition intends to enhance transparency and fairness in social security contributions and prevent wage manipulation through inflated allowances. Furthermore, the Code broadens the scope of minimum wage applicability to cover all employees, regardless of the industry or sector, unlike the old Minimum Wages Act which applied only to scheduled employments. It also removes the wage ceiling for the timely payment of wages, ensuring all employees are entitled to on-time salary. The provisions related to bonus payment are incorporated, with flexibility for future adjustments via notifications. Crucially, the Code explicitly prohibits gender-based wage discrimination with stronger enforcement mechanisms and introduces a concept of a national floor wage to ensure a basic living standard across states. For dispute resolution, it establishes a single authority and introduces penalties for non-compliance.

India had four seprate legislations on wages:

– Payment of Wages Act, 1936

– Minimum Wages Act, 1948

– Payment of Bonus Act, 1965

– Equal Remuneration Act, 1976

These laws overlapped, had inconsistent definitions (e.g., “wages” differed), and created administrative burdens.

New Law: The Code on Wages, 2019 consolidates all four laws into a single framework, aiming for uniformity, simplification, and ease of compliance across industries and states.

Definition of “Wages”

Old Law: Different Acts defined “wages” differently, causing confusion in calculations for overtime, bonus, PF, etc. For instance, some excluded allowances, some included.

New Law: A unified and detailed definition of “wages” is given. Broadly, it includes basic pay + dearness allowance + retaining allowance but excludes bonus, HRA, overtime, conveyance, and certain commissions (subject to a 50% cap rule – if allowances exceed 50% of total remuneration, the excess will be counted as wages).

Explanation: This change ensures transparency, fairness in social security contributions, and avoids manipulation by artificially lowering “wages” through high allowances.

Minimum Wages

Old Law: The Minimum Wages Act, 1948 applied only to scheduled employments (specific listed industries).

New Law: The Code on Wages mandates universal minimum wages – covering all employees across industries, organized or unorganized.

Explanation: This major reform protects more workers, especially in non-traditional sectors like gig economy, start-ups, and services, who earlier were outside the scheduled list.

Payment of Wages

Old Law: Payment of Wages Act applied only to workers earning below a wage ceiling (e.g., ₹24,000 per month).

New Law: No wage ceiling. The obligation to pay timely wages applies to all employes, regardless of salary amount.

Explanation: This improves the right to timely payment for white-collar and highly-paid employees too, not just for workers in factories or industries.

Bonus Payment

Old Law: Payment of Bonus Act, 1965 gave bonuses based on profitability and productivity to employees earning less than a statutory salary limit.

New Law: The provisions related to bonus (eligibility, calculation, and ceiling) are incorporated into the Code, but with provisions for change via future notifications.

Explanation: The Code makes it easier to adjust bonus rules based on economic conditions without needing fresh legislation.

Gender Equality

Old Law: The Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 required equal pay for equal work but had limited implementation.

New Law: Gender-based wage discrimination is explicitly prohibited in the Code, with better enforcement mechanisms.

Explanation: The Code places a *stronger obligation on employers* to maintain *non­discriminatory practices* and aligns with constitutional mandates under Article 14 and 16.

Adjudication and Penalties

Old Law: Enforcement was scattered among multiple authorities, leading to delays and inconsistent decisions.

New Law: The Code introduces a single authority for adjudication, along with provision for compounding minor offences and higher penalties for repeated violations.

Explanation: This streamlines dispute resolution and creates *deterrence against non­compliance.

Floor Wage Concept

Old Law: No concept of a national minimum floor wage. States decided their own minimum wages.

New Law: The Central Government can fix a national floor wage. States cannot set minimum wages lower than the floor wage.

Explanation: This ensures a basic standard of living nationally and reduces inequalities among states

Summary  

The Code on Wages, 2019 represents a fundamental shift: it removes inconsistencies, ensures uniform protections for all workers, simplifies compliance for employers, and creates a more worker-friendly legal framework. While rules under the Code are still evolving (states have to notify them), the overall goal is towards transparency, inclusivity, and ease of doing business.

1. Minimum Wage

Under the Code on Wages, 2019, the concept of minimum wage has been significantly broadened. Earlier, under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948, only workers engaged in “scheduled employments” (i.e., specific industries listed by the government) were entitled to minimum wages. This meant that a large number of workers in unlisted sectors were left out. However, the Code has removed the concept of scheduled employment and now guarantees a minimum wage for all employees, whether in organized or unorganized sectors. Furthermore, the Central Government has the authority to fix a national floor wage*, and state governments cannot set their minimum wage below this floor. This reform ensures that every employee, regardless of their sector or job type, receives at least a basic level of income to support a decent standard of living. It also helps in reducing exploitation and income inequality across different regions and industries.

2. Timely Payment

The Code on Wages also addresses a major concern in the employment sector — delayed payments of wages. Under earlier laws, only certain categories of workers (like those earning below a specified limit) were covered under the Payment of Wages Act, 1936 for timely wage payments. Now, the Code applies to all employees, without any wage limit. It mandates that wages must be paid on time — daily workers must be paid at the end of the shift, weekly workers within 7 days, and monthly workers within the 7th day of the following month. This ensures financial security for workers and prevents unnecessary hardship due to late salaries. Moreover, employers must pay wages through recognized modes such as bank transfers, cheques, or cash, ensuring greater transparency. This provision promotes better employer accountability and strengthens employee rights.

3. Equal Remuneration

Promoting gender equality in the workplace is a key feature of the Code on Wages, 2019. It reinforces the principle of equal pay for equal work, irrespective of gender. Earlier, the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 protected women against discrimination in matters of wages and recruitment, but it was a separate law and was often poorly implemented. Now, under the Code, employers are explicitly prohibited from paying lesser wages to women than to men for performing the same work or work of a similar nature. It also bars discrimination at the stage of recruitment for the same role. By integrating this into a comprehensive wage law, the government aims to strengthen gender justice, promote women’s participation in the workforce, and uphold the constitutional promise of equality under Articles 14 and 16. This step makes it easier to enforce equality norms across industries and sectors.

Consolidated overview presented in a table

Aspect Old Laws (Before 2019) New Law: Code on Wages, 2019
Number of

Laws

Four separate Acts:

1. Payment of Wages Act, 1936

2. Minimum Wages Act, 1948

3. Payment of Bonus Act, 1965

4. Equal Remuneration Act, 1976

All four merged into one single code for simplification and uniformity.
Applicability of Minimum Wages Only applied to scheduled industries and employment types listed by the government. Applies to all employees in all sectors, making it more inclusive.
Definition of Wages Different definitions in different Acts, often caused confusion A uniform and broader definition of “wages” introduced under Section 2(y),
covering basic pay, dearness allowance, etc.
Bonus
Payment
Only to employees earning less than ₹21,000 per month Threshold remains similar, but the Code empowers the government to revise the wage ceiling.
Gender

Equality in
Pay

Governed by the Equal Remuneration Act, 1976. Covered under Section 3 of the Code:

ensures equal pay for equal work for all genders.

Overtime Provisions Covered differently in various Acts. Standardized across sectors: twice the normal wage for overtime.
Payment of Wages
Timeline
Varies based on establishment and employee category Fixed timelines: monthly wages must be paid by the 7th of the next month
Inspector System Traditional inspectors with more punitive focus. Introduces Inspector-cum-Facilitators, focusing on guidance and compliance, not just punishment.
Dispute Redressal Multiple authorities under different Acts. Unified grievance mechanism and simplified adjudication system through appointed
authorities.

*****

Author: Soumya Singh | College – Lovely Professional University | Course- Ba LLB Hons

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