நமது 02.09.2015 ஒரு நாள் வேலை நிறுத்தத்தின் வெற்றி !
போனஸ் சட்டத் திருத்தம் நிறைவேறியது. 1.4.2014 முதல் அமலுக்கு வரும். பார்க்க பத்திரிகை செய்தி கீழே !
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Tuesday, 22 December 2015 - 9:00pm IST | Place: New Delhi | Agency: PTI
The Lok Sabha on
Tuesday passed a bill allowing doubling of wage ceiling for calculating
bonus to Rs 7,000 per month for factory workers with establishments
with 20 or more workers, with the benefits being applicable
retrospectively from April 2014.
The Payment of
Bonus (Amendment) Bill, 2015, was passed by a voice vote, with some
members objecting to the raising of eligibility limit for payment of
bonus from a salary of Rs 10,000 per month to Rs 21,000.
Replying to a debate on the legislation, Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya said the Government has ensured that the interest of workers are protected and there is no infringement on their rights.
"Because of Bihar Elections this bill got delayed... The
Prime Minister spoke to me and asked why should the benefits of this
Act should accrue to workers from 2015. It should be made available from
the April 2014," he said while moving an official amendment to the
Bill.
The
official amendment provides that the benefits of the Act would be
deemed to have come into force on April 1, 2014, instead of April 1,
2015. Dattatreya said the Ministry has held 21 tripartite meetings with all central trade unions while arriving at a decision.
The Bill
provides for enhancing monthly bonus calculation ceiling to Rs 7,000 per
month from the existing Rs 3,500. It also seeks to enhance the
eligibility limit for payment of bonus from Rs 10,000 per month to Rs
21,000 per month.
"The
Government's paramount intention is to safeguard the interest of
workers... There is no infringement of workers' rights and whatever the
government does will be in the interest of workers," Dattatreya said.
After
the bill was passed, Deputy Speaker M Thambidurai, who was in the
Chair, said the government should be congratulated for bringing the
measure as also for effecting the benefits retrospectively.
Terming the legislation as historic, Dattatreya said the outgo from government coffers would be about Rs 6,203 crore.
The Minister
said the Bill would benefit crores of organised sector worker. He said
unorganised sector constitute 93 per cent of the workforce or about 40
crore people.
Participating
in the discussion, Mumtaz Sanghamita (TMC) said "it will benefit vast
majority of poor workers. Bonus is the thing which is extra and over
regular pay". She, however, wanted to know whether the increase in
ceiling was commensurate to the inflation rate.
M Srinivas Rao
(TDP) observed that labour laws in India were very weak and government
should ensure safety and security for workers.
K Visheweshwar
Reddy (TRS) said the sharp cut off of Rs 21,000 per month was flawed and
added that contractual workers in factories are overworked and
underpaid.
Sankar Prasad
Datta (CPI-M) too echoed similar views saying that Rs 21,000 per month
ceiling should not be there. Jaiprakash Narayan Yadav (SP) said there
should be a special provision for women workers while providing bonus.
Prahlad Singh
Patel (BJP) asked the government to fix a minimum ceiling and not the
maximum one. "We can also think of linking it with the Pay Commission,
so that we do not have to come again and again to Parliament to make
changes". He said bonus should not be linked to profit or losses.
The Payment of
Bonus Act, 1965, is applicable to every factory and other establishment
in which 20 or more persons are employed on any day during an accounting
year. The last amendment to the eligibility limit and the calculation
ceiling was carried out in 2007 and made effective from April 1, 2006.
This amendment
in the Act to increase wage ceiling and bonus calculation ceiling was
one of the assurances given by the Centre after 10 day central trade
unions went on one-day strike on September 2.
Source : http://www.dnaindia.com/
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NEW
DELHI: The Lok Sabha has approved amendments to the Payment of Bonus
Act that seeks to make more workers eligible for bonus by raising the
monthly pay eligibility limit of employees to Rs 21,000 from Rs 10,000.
The bill, tabled in the house
earlier this month, also seeks to enhance monthly bonus calculation
ceiling to Rs 7,000 per month from Rs 3,500, thus substantially
increasing amount of bonus.
Both
the proposed changes are in line with the demands of 10 central trade
unions, which had observed a daylong strike on September 22. "We are
thankful to the government for fulfilling one of its commitments made to
our 10-point charter of demands and hope that it continues to work
towards fulfilling its other commitments as well," said Vrijesh
Upadhaya, general secretary of the RSS affiliated Bhartiya Mazdoor
Sangh. The bill will now be tabled in Rajya Sabha. Once approved, it
will bemade effective from April 1, 2014.
The
Payment of Bonus Act 1965 is applicable to every factory and other
establishment in which 20 or more people are employed on any day during
an accounting year.
The
amendments bill also provides for a new proviso in Section 12, which
empowers the central government to vary the basis of computing the
bonus.
As it stands today, Section 12 says that where the salary or wage of
an employee exceedsRs 3,500 per month, the minimum or maximum bonus
payable to the employee shall be calculated as if his salary or wage was
Rs 3,500 per month.
This
amendment in the Act to increase wage ceiling and bonus calculation
ceiling was one of assurances given by the Centre after 10 central trade
unions went on a daylong strike on September 2.
=The Economic Times.
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