"Our labour laws were also very tardy, and great impediment for the growth. We got to take stock of the situation. We got to look into each and every sector, which is basically labour intensive, and wherever required we got to change our rules and regulations, especially the labour laws," Labour Secretary Shankar Aggarwal said.
He was speaking at a seminar on 'Compliance of Labour Legislations-Issues and Concern' organised by industry PHD Chamber.
"We got to ease our labour laws. We have got about 44 labour laws. And to expect a small business enterprise to take care of all these is a tall order. So, we are converting those 44 labour laws into 4 codes.
"One code is on industrial relations, one is on wages, third code is on social security and fourth is on safety. Two codes are almost ready, one on wage and one on industrial relations," he added.
At the same time, Aggarwal said, government would ensure that "every worker gets a decent salary. We are sensitive to the need of employees and employers."
"On the compliance side, we are trying to dilute many more compliances, so that people need not be scared of these laws. Even in terms of hiring people, we are taking steps. We also have to ensure that every worker get a decent salary," Aggarwal said.
On job creation, he said India needs to create 5-7 million more jobs per year at every level to make the economic growth sustainable and sufficient.
"Unfortunately in the last few years, in spite of all these growth of 9 per cent and plus (before 2008-09), the growth has mainly been a jobless growth."
"Unfortunately the labour polices and the laws are working in the opposite direction. Instead of encouraging creation of jobs, it basically demotivates a person to go up a higher level of employment generation.
"The moment you cross 300 (number of employees), you have a different set of laws, the moment you cross 20 you have different set of laws, and those laws may be a little more harsh. So everybody is trying to limit the workforce and that is not very conducive (for growth)," he added.
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