flowchart LR
A["Minimum Wages <br> Act, 1948"] --> B[Appropriate Government]
A --> C[Scheduled Employments]
A --> D[Fixation Procedures]
A --> E[Wage Components]
A --> F[Enforcement]
D --> D1[Committee Method]
D --> D2[Notification Method]
E --> E1[Basic Wage]
E --> E2[Variable Dearness Allowance]
E --> E3[House Rent Allowance]
G["Skill Categories"] --> G1[Unskilled]
G --> G2[Semi-Skilled]
G --> G3[Skilled]
G --> G4[Highly Skilled]
H["Code on Wages, 2019"] --> H1[Universal Coverage]
H --> H2[National Floor Wage]
%% Style
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class A,B,C,D,E,F,D1,D2,E1,E2,E3,G,G1,G2,G3,G4,H,H1,H2 dark;
27 Minimum Wages
By the end of this chapter, the reader will be able to:
- Identify the conceptual rationale and the historical origins of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 in India.
- Apply the institutional framework of the Act, including the role of the appropriate government, the Schedule of scheduled employments, the procedures for fixation and revision, and the consultative mechanisms (Committee Method and Notification Method).
- Identify the components of minimum wages, including basic wages, dearness allowance (variable dearness allowance or VDA), and house rent allowance, and the categorisation of wages by skill (unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, highly skilled).
- Apply the enforcement mechanisms under the Act, including the role of inspectors, the claims procedure under Section 20, and the penalties for contravention.
- Locate the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 within the Code on Wages, 2019, including the introduction of the floor wage concept and the universal application across all employments.
27.1 Introduction
This chapter takes up the Minimum Wages Act, 1948, the second of the four principal Indian wage statutes. The Act addresses the conceptual problem of inadequate wages in employments characterised by weak worker bargaining power. It empowers the central and state governments to fix and periodically revise minimum wages for “scheduled employments”, with separate scheduling at the central and state levels.
27.2 Conceptual Rationale and Historical Origins
27.2.1 The Conceptual Rationale
The Minimum Wages Act, 1948 rests on the proposition that, in employments characterised by weak worker bargaining power, market wages may fall below the level necessary for subsistence. The Act addresses this problem by imposing a statutory floor below which wages may not be paid, with the floor set by the appropriate government on the basis of subsistence requirements and prevailing economic conditions.
The Act was among the first social welfare statutes enacted by the Indian Parliament after Independence. Its design drew on the recommendations of the Standing Labour Committee, the recommendations of the Royal Commission on Labour (1929-31), and the international standards developed by the International Labour Organization in the post-war period.
27.2.2 The Historical Origins
The minimum wage concept has its origins in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with New Zealand (1894), the Australian colonies (1896 onwards), and the United Kingdom (1909, through the Trade Boards Act) being the early adopters. The ILO Convention No. 26 of 1928 (Minimum Wage-Fixing Machinery Convention) and Convention No. 99 of 1951 (Minimum Wage Fixing Machinery (Agriculture) Convention) provided international templates that shaped national legislation.
In India, the colonial government did not enact a comprehensive minimum wage statute. The Royal Commission on Labour (1929-31, the Whitley Commission) recommended the introduction of minimum wage fixing machinery in employments where there was no effective collective bargaining. The recommendation was implemented after Independence through the Minimum Wages Act, 1948.
27.3 Institutional Framework
27.3.1 The Appropriate Government
The Act distinguishes between the central appropriate government and the state appropriate government. The central government is the appropriate government for employments under the central authority (such as railways, mines, oil fields, major ports, and certain other central-sector establishments). The state government is the appropriate government for all other employments within the state.
The distinction matters for several reasons. The central and state governments maintain separate Schedules of scheduled employments. The fixation of minimum wages is by the relevant appropriate government for each employment. The minimum wages for the same occupation may differ across states and between central and state authority.
27.3.2 Scheduled Employments
The Act applies only to scheduled employments, that is, employments listed in the Schedule to the Act or notified by the appropriate government from time to time. The Schedule is divided into two parts: Part I lists employments to which the Act applies on enactment, and Part II permits the appropriate government to add other employments by notification.
Common scheduled employments include agriculture, public motor transport, construction, plantations, beedi making, brick kilns, mines, plywood manufacture, shops and commercial establishments, and many specific industrial activities. The list expands over time as governments notify additional employments to bring more workers within the Act’s protection.
A practitioner observation worth emphasising is that the schedule approach has been criticised for its under-coverage. Workers in employments not yet scheduled (often the most vulnerable) may fall outside the Act’s protection until the appropriate government notifies the employment. The Code on Wages, 2019 addresses this concern by extending minimum wage protection across all employments, eliminating the schedule limitation.
27.4 Fixation and Revision Procedures
The Act prescribes two methods for the fixation and revision of minimum wages: the Committee Method (Section 5(1)(a)) and the Notification Method (Section 5(1)(b)).
27.4.1 Committee Method (Section 5(1)(a))
“In fixing minimum rates of wages in respect of any scheduled employment for the first time under this Act or in revising minimum rates of wages so fixed, the appropriate government shall either:
- appoint as many committees and sub-committees as it considers necessary to hold enquiries and advise it in respect of such fixation or revision, as the case may be.”
Under the Committee Method, the appropriate government appoints committees comprising representatives of employers, workers, and independent persons to investigate the relevant employment, to consult stakeholders, and to recommend minimum wages. The recommendations inform the appropriate government’s notification of minimum wages.
27.4.2 Notification Method (Section 5(1)(b))
“(b) by notification in the Official Gazette publish its proposals for the information of persons likely to be affected thereby and specify a date, not less than two months from the date of the notification, on which the proposals will be taken into consideration.”
Under the Notification Method, the appropriate government publishes proposed minimum wages in the Official Gazette, invites comments from affected persons, considers the comments, and notifies the final minimum wages. The Notification Method is faster than the Committee Method and is typically used for revisions where consultation has already occurred or where the changes are incremental.
27.4.3 Periodic Revision
Section 3(1B) requires the appropriate government to review and revise the minimum wages at intervals not exceeding five years. In practice, most states revise minimum wages more frequently, often through the Variable Dearness Allowance mechanism that adjusts for changes in the consumer price index between full revisions.
27.5 Components of Minimum Wages
The minimum wages fixed by the appropriate government typically comprise three components.
Basic wage — the foundational component, set at the time of fixation;
Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) — an inflation-linked supplement adjusted periodically (typically every six months) on the basis of changes in the consumer price index for industrial workers;
House Rent Allowance (HRA) — a supplement intended to defray housing costs, applicable in certain employments.
The total minimum wage is the sum of the three components. Some employments may have additional components, such as travel allowance or special allowance.
27.5.1 Categorisation by Skill Level
Minimum wages are typically fixed separately for different skill levels within an employment:
Unskilled — workers performing tasks not requiring particular skill or training;
Semi-skilled — workers performing tasks requiring some skill but not extensive training;
Skilled — workers performing tasks requiring substantial skill and typically formal training or apprenticeship;
Highly skilled — workers performing tasks requiring exceptional skill and extensive training or experience.
The skill-level categorisation reflects the differentiated value of different types of work and ensures that minimum wages are not uniformly low across an industry. The specific categorisation rules are prescribed by the appropriate government for each scheduled employment.
27.5.2 Categorisation by Geography
Minimum wages may also be differentiated by geography within a state, with separate rates for “Zone A” (typically major urban areas), “Zone B” (smaller towns), and “Zone C” (rural areas), reflecting differences in cost of living. The zone classification rules are prescribed by the appropriate government and revised periodically.
27.6 Concepts of Minimum Wage, Fair Wage, and Living Wage
The Indian jurisprudence has historically distinguished between three wage concepts.
Minimum wage — The wage that ensures the bare subsistence of the worker, providing for food, clothing, shelter, and basic necessities. The statutory floor under the Minimum Wages Act, 1948.
Fair wage — An intermediate wage above the minimum but below the living wage. The fair wage represents a wage that, while not luxurious, allows for some additional comforts and provision for contingencies. Indian jurisprudence has recognised the fair wage as an aspirational standard achievable through collective bargaining and economic growth.
Living wage — The wage that ensures a decent standard of life with full enjoyment of leisure, social and cultural opportunities. The living wage is the constitutional aspiration of Article 43 and represents the long-term goal of Indian wage policy.
The distinction has shaped the design of Indian wage policy. The minimum wage operates as the statutory floor; the fair wage is the target of collective bargaining and progressive policy; the living wage is the constitutional aspiration. The relationship between the three concepts has been the subject of substantial debate, with periodic proposals to set the statutory minimum wage at the living wage level.
27.6.1 The 1957 Indian Labour Conference Norms
The Indian Labour Conference in 1957 prescribed five “norms” for the calculation of minimum wages:
Three consumption units per worker (covering the worker, the spouse, and two children of equivalent consumption to one adult);
Net intake of 2,700 calories per adult per day;
Cloth requirement of 65 yards per family per year;
Rent corresponding to the minimum area provided under government industrial housing schemes;
Miscellaneous expenditures, fuel, lighting, and other items at 20 per cent of the total minimum wage.
The Supreme Court in Workmen v. Reptakos Brett & Co. Ltd. (1992) added a sixth norm: children’s education, medical requirements, recreation, festivals, and ceremonies at 25 per cent of the total minimum wage.
The norms have informed the fixation of minimum wages, although the actual fixation has often fallen short of the norms because of practical and economic considerations.
27.7 Enforcement and Remedies
27.7.1 Inspectors
The appropriate government appoints inspectors under Section 19 of the Act with powers similar to those of factory inspectors, including powers of entry, examination of records, and inquiry into alleged contraventions. Inspectors are typically the same officers as the inspectors under the Payment of Wages Act and the Factories Act.
27.7.3 Penalties
Section 22 prescribes penalties for contravention of the Act. The principal penalty is imprisonment up to six months, or a fine up to ₹500, or both. The Code on Wages, 2019 substantially increases the penalty levels.
27.8 The Code on Wages, 2019
The Code on Wages, 2019 substantially modifies the Indian minimum wage framework. The principal changes include:
Universal coverage — the minimum wage protection extends across all employments, eliminating the scheduled-employment limitation;
National floor wage — the central government fixes a national floor wage below which no state minimum wage may fall, providing a national floor for the regional fixation;
Standardised methodology — the methodology for fixation considers skill, geographical area, and workers’ subsistence needs in a standardised framework;
Streamlined enforcement — the inspection and claims mechanisms are streamlined and integrated with the broader labour code framework;
Enhanced penalties — penalties for contravention are substantially increased, with provision for compounding of offences.
The Code on Wages, 2019 has been progressively notified, with the date of full implementation depending on the framing of rules by the central and state governments. Pending full implementation, the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 continues to apply.
27.9 Case Studies
27.9.1 Case Study 1: A Minimum Wage Compliance Audit
A construction firm operating across three states (Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu) conducts a minimum wage compliance audit. Construction is a scheduled employment in each state, with separately fixed rates for unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, and highly skilled workers, differentiated by zone.
The audit examines the actual wages paid against the applicable minimum wages for each worker, location, and skill category. The audit identifies several compliance gaps in Maharashtra (unskilled workers in Zone A receiving slightly below the most recently revised minimum wage) and several gaps in Karnataka (semi-skilled workers in Zone B receiving exactly the minimum wage but without the most recent VDA adjustment).
The firm remediates each gap by paying the difference plus an interest premium and reviews its HR systems to ensure timely tracking of revisions.
Discussion Questions
- How should the firm centralise the tracking of minimum wage revisions across multiple states to support timely compliance?
- What features of the construction industry’s labour-supply pattern (often through subcontractors) complicate minimum wage compliance, and how should the firm address them?
- How does the Section 21 provision on contractor responsibility interact with the firm’s overall liability?
27.9.2 Case Study 2: A Minimum Wage Revision Dispute
A state government proposes to revise the minimum wages for the textile industry by 25 per cent in a single revision, in response to substantial inflation since the previous revision. The textile industry contests the proposed revision, arguing that the magnitude is unsustainable and would lead to substantial layoffs and plant closures.
The dispute is examined through the Notification Method consultation. The industry submits financial data on its margins and competitive position. Trade unions submit data on the cost of living and the inadequacy of the current wage. The government considers the submissions, conducts further consultations, and ultimately notifies a phased revision (15 per cent in the first year, 10 per cent in the second year) to balance the competing concerns.
Discussion Questions
- To what extent should economic considerations (industry sustainability, competitiveness) be relevant to the fixation of minimum wages?
- How should the appropriate government balance the worker’s right to a subsistence wage with the industry’s economic constraints?
- What lessons does the case offer for the design of phased revision mechanisms in other contexts?
27.9.3 Case Study 3: The Living Wage Aspiration
A coalition of trade unions and civil society organisations files a public interest litigation in the Supreme Court of India, arguing that the prevailing minimum wages fall substantially short of the living wage required by Article 43 of the Constitution and the Reptakos Brett norms. The petitioners seek directions to the central and state governments to fix minimum wages at the living wage level within a stated timeframe.
The Supreme Court has, in the past, recognised the gap between minimum wage and living wage but has declined to mandate immediate parity, citing the economic capacity constraint in Article 43 itself (“within the limits of its economic capacity and development”). The Court has, however, directed periodic review of the methodology and progressive narrowing of the gap.
Discussion Questions
- To what extent should the courts mandate the alignment of minimum wages with the living wage, given the economic capacity constraint?
- How does the Code on Wages, 2019 address the gap between minimum wage and living wage through the national floor wage mechanism?
- What lessons does the case offer for the broader policy discussion on Indian wage levels in a comparative international perspective?
Summary
| Concept | Description |
|---|---|
| Conceptual Foundation | |
| Conceptual Rationale of Minimum Wage | Statutory floor below which wages may not be paid, addressing inadequate market wages in employments with weak worker bargaining power |
| Whitley Commission Recommendation | 1929-31 Royal Commission recommended introduction of minimum wage fixing machinery in employments without effective collective bargaining, implemented post-Independence |
| ILO Convention No. 26 of 1928 | International template under the Minimum Wage-Fixing Machinery Convention, shaping national legislation including the Indian Act of 1948 |
| Institutional Framework | |
| Appropriate Government | Central government for central-sector employments (railways, mines, etc.); state governments for all other employments within the state |
| Central and State Distinction | Central and state governments maintain separate Schedules; minimum wages may differ across states and between central and state authority for the same occupation |
| Schedule of Employments | Employments listed in the Schedule or notified by the appropriate government; the Act applies only to scheduled employments under the 1948 Act |
| Fixation Procedures | |
| Section 5(1)(a) Committee Method | Fixation through committees of employers, workers, and independent persons that hold enquiries, consult stakeholders, and recommend minimum wages |
| Section 5(1)(b) Notification Method | Fixation through publication of proposals in the Official Gazette inviting comments, with at least two months for response, faster than the Committee Method |
| Five-Year Revision Requirement | Section 3(1B) requires review and revision at intervals not exceeding five years; most states revise more frequently through VDA |
| Wage Components and Differentiation | |
| Basic Wage | Foundational component set at the time of fixation; provides the substantive base on which other components are added |
| Variable Dearness Allowance (VDA) | Inflation-linked supplement adjusted typically every six months on the basis of changes in the consumer price index for industrial workers |
| House Rent Allowance (HRA) | Supplement intended to defray housing costs, applicable in certain employments |
| Skill Categories | Unskilled, semi-skilled, skilled, and highly skilled, reflecting the differentiated value of different types of work |
| Zone Differentiation | Zone A (major urban), Zone B (smaller towns), Zone C (rural), reflecting differences in cost of living within a state |
| Wage Concepts and Norms | |
| Minimum Wage Concept | Wage that ensures bare subsistence, providing food, clothing, shelter, and basic necessities; the statutory floor under the Act |
| Fair Wage Concept | Intermediate wage above minimum but below living wage; allows some additional comforts and contingency provision; target of collective bargaining |
| Living Wage Concept | Wage ensuring decent standard of life with full enjoyment of leisure, social and cultural opportunities; constitutional aspiration of Article 43 |
| 1957 ILC Five Norms | Three consumption units per worker, 2,700 calories per adult per day, 65 yards of cloth, minimum housing rent, 20% miscellaneous |
| Workmen v. Reptakos Brett (1992) | Supreme Court added the sixth norm: education, medical, recreation, festivals at 25% of the total minimum wage |
| Enforcement and Code Reform | |
| Section 19 Inspectors | Inspectors with powers similar to factory inspectors, including entry, examination of records, and inquiry into alleged contraventions |
| Section 20 Authority | Authority appointed by appropriate government to hear and decide claims for short payment, with power to direct payment plus up to 10x compensation |
| Section 22 Penalties | Penalty for contravention: imprisonment up to six months, fine up to ₹500, or both; substantially increased by the Code on Wages, 2019 |
| Code on Wages, 2019 | Substantial modification of the framework, with universal coverage, national floor wage, standardised methodology, and enhanced penalties |
| Universal Coverage | Minimum wage protection extends across all employments under the Code, eliminating the scheduled-employment limitation of the 1948 Act |
| National Floor Wage | Central government fixes a national floor wage below which no state minimum wage may fall, providing national floor for regional fixation |