‘Wages by cheque will keep away lenders’


'Wages by Cheque Will Keep Away Lenders' — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1936 Payment of Wages Act, 1936 (Act No. 4 of 1936) enacted; mandated wages in coin or currency notes only. [S4][S5]
~1970s Ordinance issued enabling cheque payment; later replaced by the Amendment Bill debated in Parliament (article date). [S1]
2012 Wage ceiling under the Act raised to ₹18,000/month (w.e.f. 11 September 2012) to widen applicability. [S3]
2016 Payment of Wages (Amendment) Bill, 2016 introduced; enabled payment by cheque or bank credit; removed written-authorisation requirement. [S6]
2017 Payment of Wages (Amendment) Act, 2017 (No. 1 of 2017) enacted (effective 28 December 2016); formally allows payment by (a) cash, (b) cheque, or (c) bank credit. [S2][S7]
April 2017 Central Government notified (26 April 2017) that specified industrial/other establishments in the Central Sphere must pay wages only by cheque or bank credit. [S2]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Payment of Wages Act was enacted in 1936 (Act No. 4 of 1936). [S4]
  2. Originally, wages under the Act were payable only in coin or currency notes. [S4]
  3. The Amendment Bill debated in the Lok Sabha sought to replace an ordinance — not a direct legislative introduction. [S1]
  4. At the time of Parliamentary debate, cheque payment was asserted as purely voluntary; no employer could pay by cheque without employee authorisation. [S1]
  5. Sectors specifically flagged for bank branch expansion: colliery areas and tea gardens. [S1]
  6. The Amendment Bill was first passed by Rajya Sabha, then Lok Sabha. [S1]
  7. The Payment of Wages (Amendment) Act, 2017 is Act No. 1 of 2017; effective from 28 December 2016. [S7]
  8. The 2017 Amendment removed the requirement of written authorisation from employees for cheque payment. [S3]
  9. The 2017 Amendment empowers the appropriate Government (Central or State) to notify establishments mandatorily paying wages only by cheque or bank credit. [S2]
  10. Mandatory cheque/bank payment for Central Sphere establishments was notified on 26 April 2017. [S2]
  11. The wage ceiling under the Payment of Wages Act was raised to ₹18,000/month effective 11 September 2012. [S3]
  12. Implementing ministry: Ministry of Labour and Employment (not Finance Ministry). [S2]
  13. The Payment of Wages Act 1936 falls under the Concurrent List of the Constitution. [S4]
  14. The Code on Wages, 2019 subsumes the Payment of Wages Act 1936 along with three other labour laws. [S6]
  15. CPI-M was the only party that opposed the Amendment Bill during the Parliamentary debate reported in the article. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

Parameter Detail
GS Paper GS-II (Social Justice, Labour Welfare); GS-III (Indian Economy, Financial Inclusion)
Syllabus Heading GS-II: "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections"; GS-III: "Inclusive growth and issues arising from it"

Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "Payment of wages by cheque has been described as a tool to liberate workers from the clutches of moneylenders. Critically examine the enabling conditions and implementation challenges of this shift in India." (GS-II/III) 2. "Trace the evolution of India's Payment of Wages Act, 1936, from a cash-only mandate to digital payment inclusion. How does the Code on Wages, 2019, consolidate these gains?" (GS-III) 3. "The voluntary nature of cheque-based wage payment may be a nominal protection for workers with low bargaining power. Discuss with reference to India's labour legislation." (GS-II/GS-IV — Ethics angle on power asymmetry)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Code on Wages, 2019 Consolidates Payment of Wages Act 1936 — the modern legislative successor.
Jan Dhan Yojana (PMJDY) Provided the bank account infrastructure that makes mandatory digital wage payment feasible.
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) Same financial-inclusion logic — routing government payments through banking to eliminate middlemen.
Minimum Wages Act, 1948 Sibling labour statute; merged with Payment of Wages Act under Code on Wages, 2019.
Micro-finance and SHGs Parallel mechanism to liberate workers from moneylenders — study alongside informal credit markets.
Plantation Labour Act, 1951 Tea gardens specifically mentioned in the debate — this Act governs plantation worker welfare.
India's Labour Code Consolidation (4 Codes) Broader reform context: Code on Wages, Industrial Relations Code, Social Security Code, Occupational Safety Code.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong year of parent Act: The Payment of Wages Act is 1936, not 1948 (which is the Minimum Wages Act — a common confusion).
  2. Ministry confusion: Implementing ministry is Labour and Employment, not Finance Ministry, even though the subject involves banking and wages.
  3. Voluntarism misread: Original 1970s Bill = voluntary (with employee authorisation); 2017 Amendment removed written-authorisation requirement AND enabled government to mandate cheque/bank payment — the two positions are different and aspirants conflate them.
  4. Code on Wages subsumption: After the Code on Wages, 2019, the Payment of Wages Act 1936 is subsumed — questions may test whether it still independently exists (it does not, once the Code is fully notified).
  5. Rajya Sabha vs. Lok Sabha order: The Amendment Bill passed Rajya Sabha first, then Lok Sabha — reverse of the common assumption that Money Bills or ordinary Bills always originate in Lok Sabha.

11. Sources