BusinessLogrBusinessLogr
  • Home
  • Stocks
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Company
  • Economy
  • Industry
  • Investing
  • Car News
  • Contact Us!
Reading: Workers want their voice heard in industry-friendly Gujarat
Share
Aa
BusinessLogrBusinessLogr
Aa
  • Home
  • Stocks
  • Finance
  • Business
  • Company
  • Economy
  • Industry
  • Investing
  • Car News
  • Contact Us!
Follow US
© 2023 BusinessLogr News Network.
BusinessLogr > Industry > Workers want their voice heard in industry-friendly Gujarat
Industry

Workers want their voice heard in industry-friendly Gujarat

souvik
Last updated: 2016/03/09 at 3:35 PM
souvik Published March 9, 2016
Share
5 Min Read
SHARE

A Tata Motors official offers a rose to workers at the company's plant in Sanand, Gujarat, on February 2, 2016. The workers are protesting the suspension of their 28 colleagues.

Farmers’ protests against Tata Motors’ factory in West Bengal in 2008 had forced the company to relocate its plant to ‘industry-friendly’ Gujarat. Now, with thousands of farmers claiming that they are being displaced by rapid land acquisition for industry in Gujarat, the story seems to be taking a new turn.

Almost all recent labour strikes were declared illegal by the labour department of Gujarat. These include strikes at theGeneral Motors plant in 2011, Reliance Industries textile unit in 2012, Arvind’s Ahmedabad unit in 2012, the Apollo Tyres unit in November 2012 and Larsen & Toubro’s Hazira plant in 2013.

“Gujarat does not have an agriculture policy, but it has an industrial policy,” said Sagar Rabari, secretary, Gujarat Khedut Samaj.

Rabari plans to move the Gujarat High Court to question the government’s decision to prohibit the ongoing strike at Tata Motors’ Sanand plant.

Congress leader Arjun Modwadiasaid, “There is no problem with being industry friendly, but one cannot be anti-worker.”

“It is the government’s duty to mediate between industry and labour, but the state government has been taking the side of industry,” Modwadia added.

When industrialisation began in Gujarat in the early 1900s, textile mill owners could hardly find workers. They had to provide accommodation to woo workers and most of the ‘chawls’ in Ahmedabad were built by mill owners, explained Vidyut Joshi, former director, Centre for Social Studies, South Gujarat University.

One of the first instances of industrial unrest in Gujarat was in the early 1980s when textile workers had gone on a strike demanding higher wages. Around that time Gujarat had seen the rise of several labour leaders who were also influential in state politics: Sanat Mehta, Navinchandra Barot, Natwarlal Shah and Ashok Bhatt. This legacy has waned and now there is no prominent labour leader in the Gujarat Assembly.

The level of unionisation among workers in Gujarat is also low. Officials in the state labour department admit this is a problem. “With no official channel to negotiate their demands, workers resort to flash strikes,” said an official.

“In a way, workers lost their umbrella, and increasing pressure to make labour laws industry-friendly led to convenient changes in the laws and practices of the state,” Joshi said.

Of this, the transition that holds the key to recent workers’ unrest in the state is the rise of contract labour. In the past decade, industry has moved overwhelmingly to hiring migrant labourers from Bihar and Orissa on contractual basis. There were seven million contract workers of the total twelve million industrial workers in the state, said Nihil Mehta, president of the Gujarat wing of Indian National Trade Union Congress. Contract workers are paid between Rs 4,000 and Rs 6,500 a month, he said.

The state’s minimum wages are Rs 7,000 a month for skilled workers. “Every three years, workers expect a good revision. When that does not happen, they resort to strikes,” said the labour department official. However, he disagreed with Mehta on the number of contract workers. “Contract workers should be about 30 per cent of the labour force,” he said.

The Socio Economic Review for 2015-16 suggests the value of output at current prices of all registered factories in Gujarat has climbed 10.23 per cent to Rs 1,230,642 crore in 2013-14 from Rs 1,116,395 crore in 2012-13 but the employment growth in factories has been negligible from 1.36 million in 2012-13 to 1.37 million in 2013-14.

“Gujarat is sitting on a ticking time bomb,” said Mehta. Modhwadia added the state needed quality employment and worker protection policies.

[“Source-business-standard”]

You Might Also Like

Why a cutting-edge billing system is essential in 2025: Accelerate Your Telecom Growth

SEO for Life Sciences: How to Outrank Competitors and Drive Organic Traffic

Cognitive Market Research: A Method for Obtaining Industry-Specific Impactful Insights via Industry Blogs

How to Start a Blog That Makes You Money

Simulated intelligence Patterns in Telecom 2025: Tackling Basic Industry Difficulties

TAGGED: industry-friendly Gujarat, Workers want their voice
souvik March 9, 2016
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print
Share
Previous Article Moves to revive SA’s wobbly brandy industry
Next Article Ontario’s film and TV industry had record year in 2015: gov’t

Most Viewed Posts

  • Environmental thematic investing set for strong growth in 2022
  • Second income center in banks
  • T-Mobile Adds Mexico, Canada to Simple Choice Plan
  • 18 Tea Franchises to Challenge Teavana
  • This App Claims to Turn Your Phone into a Tiny Scanner but Does it Measure Up?

Most Viewed Posts

  • Environmental thematic investing set for strong growth in 2022
  • Second income center in banks
  • T-Mobile Adds Mexico, Canada to Simple Choice Plan
  • 18 Tea Franchises to Challenge Teavana
  • This App Claims to Turn Your Phone into a Tiny Scanner but Does it Measure Up?

Recent Posts

  • Why a cutting-edge billing system is essential in 2025: Accelerate Your Telecom Growth
  • 5 things to know in life sciences: Week of April 21, 2025

© 2023 BusinessLogr News Network.

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?