The Narendra Modi Cabinet is likely to consider amendments to three labour laws on Wednesday.
These include dropping a provision that permits arresting employers under the Apprenticeship Act.
However, relaxed retrenchment norms, like those proposed by Rajasthan in its labour reforms, are not part of the current scheme of things.
Besides the Apprenticeship Act, 1961, the Factories Act, 1948, and the Labour Laws (Exemption from Furnishing Returns and Maintaining Registers by Certain Establishments) Act, 1988, will come up for discussion in Cabinet.
If approved, these pieces of legislation will be tabled in the current session of Parliament.
“The Union labour ministry plans to take these laws to Cabinet. The Bills will be taken up in the ongoing session of Parliament after Cabinet’s approval,” said a senior labour ministry official who did not wish to be named.
“Due to fear of imprisonment, employers tend to avoid coming under the Apprenticeship Act purview and training facilities available with them go unutilised,” the labour ministry said while drafting the proposal.
Amendments to the Act, the ministry said, “would encourage more employers to join the apprenticeship training scheme and would also remove the fear of prosecution”.
Ajay Shankar, member-secretary of the National Manufacturing Competitiveness Council, said: “As the law becomes flexible, it suits the present needs and increases openings for young people.”
Vishnu Deo Sai, minister of state for labour, has said in a written reply in the Lok Sabha “the apprenticeship regime in India manages to train 282,000 apprentices. . . against 490,000 apprenticeship seats located in the Central and state-sector establishments”.
To complement Prime Minister Modi’s vision on skill development, the Apprenticeship Act amendments will add 500 new trades.
Companies might also be allowed to start new trades without waiting for the Centre to notify them.
The labour ministry has proposed 54 amendments in the 61 Sections of the Factories Act.
These include increasing the overtime limit to 100 hours for a worker in a quarter from the current 50, relaxing restrictions on night work for women in factories, and empowering the central government to make rules on health and safety hazards.
The amendments to Labour Laws (Exemption from Furnishing Returns and Maintaining Registers by Certain Establishments) Act include reducing the need for small firms to maintain registers.
The definition of small establishments will also changed to firms hiring up to 40 employees, against 10 currently.
Industry has blamed India’s outdated labour laws as a hindrance