How does Code of Wages compare with old labor laws?
The Code on Wages, 2019, consolidates India’s fragmented wage-related laws into a single, modern framework. It replaces four older acts, introducing universal protections and simplifying compliance for employers.
Old Labor Laws Overview
India’s pre-2019 wage laws were piecemeal and outdated. The Payment of Wages Act, 1936 applied only to low-wage earners (below Rs 24,000/month threshold), mandating payments within 7-10 days but lacking broad enforcement. The Minimum Wages Act, 1948 covered scheduled employments, revised every 5 years without a national floor, leaving unorganized sectors vulnerable. The Payment of Bonus Act, 1965 limited bonuses to firms with 20+ workers and wages up to Rs 21,000/month, at 8.33%-20% rates. The Equal Remuneration Act, 1976 focused solely on gender pay equality in wages, ignoring recruitment or other identities.
Key Reforms in Code
The Code universalizes applicability to all employees in organized and unorganized sectors, removing wage ceilings. It defines “wages” uniformly (50% of total remuneration, excluding HRA, travel, bonuses), aiding calculations. Payments must occur by the 7th of the next month for salaried workers, with final settlements within 7 days post-termination (now including resignation). A central “floor wage” sets a national baseline, with states fixing above it, revised periodically.
Major Differences
Old laws created overlaps and exclusions; the Code streamlines via fewer registers (2 vs 10), one return, and Inspector-cum-Facilitators for advisory enforcement. Overtime is fixed at 2x (vs variable), bonus eligibility ties to notified wage caps, and equal pay extends to no-discrimination in hiring.
| Aspect | Old Laws | Code on Wages |
| Applicability | Wage/sector limits (e.g., <Rs24k for wages) | All workers, no limits |
| Min Wage Coverage | Scheduled employments only | Universal + national floor |
| Overtime Rate | Govt-set | 2x normal wage |
| Bonus Threshold | 20+ workers, <Rs21k wage | Notified monthly amount |
| Registers/Returns | 10+ registers, multiple returns | 2 registers, 1 return |
| Equal Pay Scope | Wages only, gender | Wages + recruitment, incl. transgender |
| Claim Period | 6 months | 3 years |
Compliance Benefits
Employers gain from simplified admin—digital payments encouraged, deductions capped at 50% (vs 75%), graded penalties up to Rs1 lakh/imprisonment. Workers benefit from stronger grievance portals and broader protections, though implementation varies by state. As of 2026, full rollout advances formalization.
Summary
The Code on Wages, 2019 fundamentally reforms India’s labor landscape by merging the Payment of Wages Act 1936, Minimum Wages Act 1948, Payment of Bonus Act 1965, and Equal Remuneration Act 1976 into one comprehensive law, extending universal minimum wages, timely payments, and equal pay protections to all workers regardless of sector or wage ceiling—unlike the old laws’ limited scopes—while standardizing definitions like wages (excluding HRA and bonuses), introducing a national floor wage, doubling overtime to 2x normal rates, reducing compliance from 10+ registers to 2, and broadening anti-discrimination to recruitment and transgender inclusion.
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