A century after legal recognition, workers still lack real protection
A Century After Legal Recognition, Workers Still Lack Real Protection
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note | GS-II / GS-III
1. At a Glance
- Trade Union Act, 1926 gave Indian workers their first formal legal recognition — 100 years ago — but procedural constraints, poor enforcement, and structural gaps have historically limited effective worker mobilisation. [S1][S2]
- India subsequently consolidated 29 labour laws into 4 Labour Codes (2019–2020), attempting a comprehensive overhaul, yet the codes remain largely unimplemented as Rules have not been notified by most states. [S3][S4]
- Platform/gig workers — a rapidly growing workforce — remained outside collective bargaining protections for a century; the Code on Social Security, 2020 extends limited social security recognition but still does not grant them full trade union rights. [S5]
- Critical for UPSC: intersection of Constitutional rights (Articles 19, 43A), labour jurisprudence, ILO Conventions, and India's social protection deficit.
2. Why in the News
- May 1, 2026 (International Labour Day) — The Hindu published an analysis noting that a century after the Trade Union Act, 1926 (centenary: 2026), structural gaps in worker protection — especially for platform workers and informal sector labour — persist. [S6]
- Bahman Pestonji Wadia's Madras Labour Union (1918) and the 1921 Madras court judgment (£2,000 awarded against union leaders for the Buckingham & Carnatic Mills strike) are recalled as founding grievances. [S6]
- The four Labour Codes passed in 2019–2020 have not been brought into force nationally as states have not finalised Rules — a governance flashpoint. [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1918 — Bahman Pestonji Wadia founds the Madras Labour Union, India's first trade union with regular membership and a relief fund; prior to legislation, organising workers was deemed a "conspiracy to restrain trade" under British common law. [S6]
- 1921 — Madras court awards £2,000 damages against Wadia and fellow unionists (incl. Vengal Chakkarai Chettiar) for leading a strike against Buckingham & Carnatic Mills; management waives payment on condition Wadia severs union ties. [S6]
- 1926 — Trade Unions Act, 1926 (No. 16 of 1926) enacted; granted registered trade unions immunity from civil/criminal liability; structured into 5 Chapters: Preliminary, Registration, Rights & Liabilities, Regulations, Penalties & Procedure. [S1][S2]
- 1946–1948 — Post-independence statutes: Industrial Employment (Standing Orders) Act 1946, Industrial Disputes Act 1947, Factories Act 1948, Minimum Wages Act 1948. [S1]
- 2001 — Amendment to Section 22 of Trade Unions Act: capped proportion of non-worker (outsider) office-bearers in union leadership. [S1]
- 2019–2020 — Parliament passes 4 Labour Codes consolidating 29 central labour laws: 1. Code on Wages, 2019 2. Industrial Relations Code, 2020 3. Code on Social Security, 2020 4. Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2020 [S3][S4]
- 2020–present — States yet to notify Rules; codes not operationalised nationally. [S4]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Trade Union Act year | 1926 (Act No. 16 of 1926) |
| Madras Labour Union founded | 1918, by B.P. Wadia |
| First significant strike case | Buckingham & Carnatic Mills, 1921 |
| Implementing ministry | Ministry of Labour & Employment |
| Consolidated Labour Codes | 4 Codes replacing 29 laws |
| Gig worker definition | Code on Social Security, 2020 — "person who performs work or participates in a work arrangement and earns from such activities outside of traditional employer-employee relationship" |
| Platform worker definition | Formally defined and included in Code on Social Security, 2020 [S5] |
| Aggregator contribution | 1–2% of annual turnover (capped at 5% of payments to gig/platform workers) to Social Security Fund [S5] |
| e-Shram portal | Aadhaar-linked unique ID for unorganised/gig workers; portable benefits [S5] |
| Negotiating Union/Council | Introduced in Industrial Relations Code, 2020 — for dispute negotiation [S3][S5] |
| Constitutional provisions | Art. 19(1)(c) — right to form associations; Art. 43A — worker participation in management |
| ILO Conventions | Convention No. 87 (Freedom of Association) & No. 98 (Right to Organise) — India has not ratified either [S1] |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- India's informal/unorganised sector employs ~90% of the workforce; formal trade union protections structurally bypass the majority. [S1]
- Gig economy (Swiggy, Ola, Urban Company, etc.) represents a rapidly expanding segment with no mandatory collective bargaining mechanism. [S5]
- Aggregator contribution of 1–2% turnover to social security is modest relative to the scale of precarity. [S5]
Social
- Historically, women, Dalit, and migrant workers were structurally underrepresented in formal trade unions, compounding exclusion from legal protections. [S1]
- Platform workers — disproportionately from economically marginal communities — receive portable e-Shram benefits but no right to strike or negotiate collectively under current codes. [S5]
- The 1921 Wadia case illustrates how legal process itself was weaponised against working-class organisers. [S6]
Legal / Constitutional
- Art. 19(1)(c) guarantees the right to form associations/unions; however, this right is subject to reasonable restrictions under Art. 19(4). [S2]
- Trade Unions Act, 1926: registered union immunity covers civil suits for acts in furtherance of trade dispute and criminal conspiracy charges. [S2]
- India has not ratified ILO Conventions 87 & 98 — the two foundational instruments on freedom of association and collective bargaining — a persistent criticism. [S1]
- Industrial Relations Code, 2020 raises the threshold for a legally valid strike notice to 60 days (from 14) in "public utility services" and extends this concept broadly — critics argue this effectively criminalises spontaneous strike action. [S3]
Administrative
- 4 Labour Codes passed in 2019–2020 but operational only when state governments notify Rules under each Code; as of 2026, most states have not finalised Rules, leaving the old 29-law framework nominally in force. [S4]
- Multiplicity of trade union registrations (low membership thresholds historically led to fragmentation; 7-member minimum under 1926 Act) weakened collective bargaining power. [S2]
- Absence of a statutory minimum membership for union recognition as bargaining agent (Industrial Relations Code provides for Negotiating Union/Council but with procedural complexity). [S3]
Historical
- The arc from the 1918 Madras Labour Union → 1926 Act → 1947 Independence-era labour statutes → 2020 Labour Codes represents a century of incremental, contested reform driven largely by worker agitation rather than state initiative. [S6][S1]
- Pre-1926 British common law treated collective action as criminal conspiracy — the Act's primary achievement was decriminalisation, not empowerment. [S2][S6]
Ethical / Governance
- The persistence of unimplemented codes (passed 2020, not operationalised by 2026) reflects a governance gap between legislative intent and executive delivery. [S4]
- Platform companies' algorithmic management systems create new forms of surveillance and precarious dependency that existing labour law frameworks, drafted pre-digital, cannot adequately address. [S5]
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- Nov 2025 — PIB document "India's Labour Reforms: Simplification, Security, and Sustainable Growth" reiterates intent to operationalise Labour Codes; highlights gig worker formalisation as a priority. [S4]
- 2025 (ongoing) — States continue deliberations on Labour Code Rules; no national rollout confirmed as of mid-2026. [S4]
- PIB, 2025 — Government factsheet "Labour Reforms: Formalising and Safeguarding India's Gig & Platform Workforce" acknowledges scale of gig economy and e-Shram registration drive. [S5]
- May 1, 2026 — Labour Day analysis pieces in national media revisit Trade Union Act centenary, highlighting gap between legal recognition (1926) and substantive worker power (2026). [S6]
7. Prelims Hooks
- Trade Unions Act, 1926 is Act No. 16 of 1926 — it granted registered trade unions immunity from civil suits and criminal conspiracy charges. [S2]
- Madras Labour Union (1918) — founded by Bahman Pestonji Wadia; India's first trade union with regular membership and a relief fund. [S6]
- Minimum membership to register a trade union under Trade Unions Act, 1926: 7 members. [S2]
- Section 22 of Trade Unions Act restricted ratio of outsider (non-worker) office-bearers in union leadership; amended in 2001. [S1]
- India has not ratified ILO Convention No. 87 (Freedom of Association) or Convention No. 98 (Right to Organise and Collective Bargaining). [S1]
- 4 Labour Codes (2019–2020) replaced 29 central labour laws. [S3]
- Code on Social Security, 2020 first formally defines "Gig worker" and "Platform worker" in Indian statute. [S5]
- Aggregators under Code on Social Security, 2020 must contribute 1–2% of annual turnover to a Social Security Fund for gig/platform workers. [S5]
- Industrial Relations Code, 2020 introduces the concept of "Negotiating Union" and "Negotiating Council". [S3]
- The e-Shram portal provides Aadhaar-linked portable benefits for unorganised and platform workers. [S5]
- Under the Industrial Relations Code, 2020, strike notice in "public utility services" was extended to 60 days — critics flag this as restricting strike rights. [S3]
- The Buckingham and Carnatic Mills strike (1921) led to a £2,000 damages award against trade union leaders in Madras. [S6]
- Implementing ministry for all 4 Labour Codes: Ministry of Labour and Employment. [S3][S4]
- The Trade Unions Act, 1926 is structured in 5 Chapters: Preliminary | Registration | Rights & Liabilities | Regulations | Penalties & Procedure. [S2]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping: - GS-II: Government Policies and Interventions for development; Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections; Role of statutory bodies - GS-III: Indian Economy — Labour market, employment, informal sector, inclusive growth - GS-IV (peripheral): Ethical dimensions of governance, accountability gaps in policy implementation
Specific Syllabus Headings: - GS-II: Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections of the population by the Centre and States and the performance of these schemes; mechanisms, laws, institutions and bodies constituted for the protection and betterment of these vulnerable sections - GS-III: Labour reforms; Inclusive growth and issues arising from it; Government Budgeting
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "A century after the Trade Unions Act, 1926, the promise of worker protection in India remains unfulfilled. Critically examine the structural and administrative factors responsible for this gap." (GS-II / GS-III) 2. "The four Labour Codes of 2019–2020 represent a paradigm shift in India's industrial relations framework. Analyse the key reforms introduced and the challenges in their implementation." (GS-II / GS-III) 3. "Gig and platform workers represent the new face of labour precarity in India. Evaluate the adequacy of existing legal frameworks in protecting their rights." (GS-II / GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| ILO Conventions & India's ratification status | India has not ratified key Conventions (87, 98) — directly relevant to worker rights discourse |
| Informal Economy & e-Shram Portal | 90%+ workforce is informal; e-Shram is India's primary registration mechanism |
| Gig Economy Regulation (global models) | UK Supreme Court (Uber ruling), EU Platform Work Directive — comparative models for India |
| Industrial Disputes Act, 1947 vs Industrial Relations Code, 2020 | Old vs new framework — frequently tested in Prelims |
| Article 19(1)(c) — Freedom of Association | Constitutional basis for trade union rights; SC jurisprudence |
| Minimum Wages Act, 1948 & Code on Wages, 2019 | Companion legislation on economic floor for workers |
| Social Security in India (ESIC, EPFO) | Institutional framework for worker social protection |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong year for Trade Unions Act: Aspirants confuse 1926 (Trade Unions Act) with 1947 (Industrial Disputes Act) — these are distinct statutes with different scopes.
- Assuming 4 Labour Codes are in force: The codes were passed in 2019–2020 but are not yet operationalised nationally as states have not notified Rules — a common factual error.
- Confusing "Gig worker" and "Platform worker": The Code on Social Security, 2020 separately defines both — gig workers perform task-based work; platform workers use digital platforms as intermediaries. They are not synonymous.
- ILO Convention ratification: India is an ILO member but has not ratified Conventions 87 & 98 — aspirants wrongly assume ILO membership = ratification of all core conventions.
- Attributing Madras Labour Union to the wrong founder: It was Bahman Pestonji Wadia (B.P. Wadia), not B.R. Ambedkar or Bal Gangadhar Tilak — both contemporaries often confused in labour history questions.
11. Sources
- [S1] ILO NATLEX — "The growth and decline of political unionism in India" & India Trade Unions Act entry — https://www.ilo.org/dyn/natlex/docs/WEBTEXT/32075/64876/E26IND01.htm — (Tier 2)
- [S2] India Code — The Trade Unions Act, 1926 — https://www.indiacode.nic.in/handle/123456789/2386 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] PRS India — The Industrial Relations Code, 2020 — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-industrial-relations-code-2020 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] PIB — India's Labour Reforms: Simplification, Security, and Sustainable Growth (Nov 2025) — https://static.pib.gov.in/WriteReadData/specificdocs/documents/2025/nov/doc20251121701501.pdf — (Tier 1)
- [S5] PIB — Labour Reforms: Formalising and Safeguarding India's Gig & Platform Workforce — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2200767 — (Tier 1); also PRS India — Code on Social Security, 2020 — https://prsindia.org/billtrack/the-code-on-social-security-2020 — (Tier 1)
- [S6] The Hindu — "A century after legal recognition, workers still lack real protection" by Prathmesh Kher, May 1, 2026, p. 11 International Print Edition — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-05-01/th_international/articleGI2FU32T7-14434630.ece — (Tier 4 / Article excerpt provided)