Economic Survey promises, impact of new labour codes
Economic Survey Promises & Impact of New Labour Codes
UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Four Labour Codes consolidate 29 existing central labour laws into four umbrella statutes covering Wages, Industrial Relations, Occupational Safety & Health (OSH), and Social Security. [S1]
- Economic Survey 2025-26 makes bold projections: formalisation rising from 60.4% → 75.5%, 77 lakh new jobs, and a 1.25% GDP boost by 2029-30. [S2]
- Draft Central Rules for all four codes were released in December 2025 for public consultation — a critical milestone after years of delay. [S3]
- Underlying tension: over 80% of India's workforce remains informal; critics argue the codes may entrench informality by loosening firm-level obligations. [S4]
2. Why in the News
- November 2025: Central Government formally notified the four Labour Codes, ending a multi-year implementation standstill. [S3]
- 30 December 2025: Draft Central Rules published under each code for public consultation (45-day window; 30 days for Industrial Relations Code). [S3]
- January 2026: Economic Survey 2025-26 released with chapter-level projections on labour formalisation and GDP impact. [S2]
- March 2026: Academic and policy critique published highlighting the gap between the Survey's projections and ground realities (Azim Premji University research). [S4]
3. Background & Evolution
- Pre-2019 landscape: 29+ central labour laws, perceived as complex, overlapping, and compliance-heavy — cited as a key obstacle to formalisation and ease of doing business.
- 2002: Second National Commission on Labour (Ravindra Varma Commission) first recommended consolidation into four broad codes.
- 2019: Code on Wages enacted — first of the four codes; introduced National Floor Wage concept. [S1]
- 2020: Three remaining codes enacted — Industrial Relations Code, OSH Code, and Code on Social Security — recognising gig and platform workers for the first time. [S1]
- 2020-2025: Implementation stalled; states needed to frame their own rules; central rules awaited.
- November 2025: Codes formally notified; December 2025: Draft Central Rules issued for all four codes. [S3]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Number of codes | 4 |
| Laws subsumed | 29 central labour laws |
| Code on Wages year | 2019 |
| IR / OSH / SS Codes year | 2020 |
| Draft Central Rules released | 30 December 2025 |
| Nodal Ministry | Ministry of Labour & Employment |
| Formalisation (current) | 60.4% (Economic Survey baseline) |
| Formalisation (projected) | 75.5% by 2029-30 |
| Jobs projected | 77 lakh new jobs |
| GDP contribution projected | +1.25% by 2029-30 |
| Informal workforce share | >80% of India's workers |
| Contract workers in factories | 42% of factory workforce (2023) |
| Direct factory employment | Fell 61% → 47% (2011–2023) |
| CPSE regular job decline | −30,000 workers in 2024 alone |
| National Floor Wage | Fixed by Central Government under Code on Wages |
| Gig/platform workers | Recognised under Code on Social Security |
| Gratuity threshold (new) | After 1 year of service (contract workers) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Survey projects +1.25% GDP and 77 lakh jobs premised on lower compliance costs incentivising firms to formalise. [S2]
- Historical evidence contradicts this: direct factory employment fell from 61% to 47% between 2011 and 2023 even as regulatory flexibility increased. [S4]
- Central Public Sector Enterprises (CPSEs) shed 30,000 regular workers in 2024, replacing them with casual/contract staff — indicating formalisation logic is not auto-triggered. [S4]
Social
- Women's labour force participation cited in the Survey as a projected beneficiary — but women are disproportionately concentrated in the unprotected informal sector.
- Gig and platform workers gain statutory recognition under Code on Social Security — a significant first, but enforcement mechanisms remain undefined. [S1]
- Contract workers now entitled to equal health/social security benefits as permanent staff and free annual health check-ups under draft rules. [S3]
Legal / Constitutional
- Concurrent List (Entry 22-24, Seventh Schedule): Labour is a Concurrent subject — both Parliament and State legislatures can legislate; states must enact their own rules, creating implementation fragmentation.
- Code on Wages establishes minimum wages as a statutory entitlement for all workers including unorganised sector — a legal expansion of coverage. [S3]
- "Threshold raising" critique: codes raise the applicability threshold for protections (e.g., standing orders apply to establishments with 300+ workers vs. 100 earlier), effectively excluding a larger share of firms. [S4]
Administrative
- Draft rules provide a 45-day public consultation window (30 days for Industrial Relations Code). [S3]
- Inspector-cum-Facilitator model introduced: labour inspectors recast as compliance facilitators — reduces adversarial enforcement, raises concern about worker complaint redressal.
- Unresolved contract worker grievances must be escalated to Inspector-cum-Facilitator within 1 month. [S3]
- State-level rules divergence remains a key bottleneck; different states may implement different thresholds and definitions.
Ethical / Governance
- The "formalisation illusion": codes respond to informality by raising applicability thresholds — fewer firms fall under protections, boosting reported formalisation metrics without substantive change. [S4]
- Economic Survey projections are output of macroeconomic modelling, not empirical programme data — raises concerns about evidence-base for policy confidence.
- Gig workers' social security provisions lack funded contribution architecture — entitlement exists on paper without guaranteed fiscal backing.
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- November 2025: Four Labour Codes formally notified by Central Government. [S3]
- 30 December 2025: Draft Central Rules published under all four codes; public consultation opened. [S3]
- January 2026: Economic Survey 2025-26 released, projecting 77 lakh jobs, 75.5% formalisation, +1.25% GDP. [S2]
- 2024: CPSE regular workforce declined by 30,000; replaced by casual/contract workers (Public Enterprises Survey 2025 data). [S4]
- March 2026: Peer-reviewed critique by Azim Premji University researcher highlighting widening gap between Survey projections and empirical trends. [S4]
7. Prelims Hooks
- India's 29 central labour laws were consolidated into 4 Labour Codes.
- The Code on Wages was the first to be enacted — in 2019.
- The Industrial Relations Code, OSH Code, and Code on Social Security were all enacted in 2020.
- Labour appears in the Concurrent List (Seventh Schedule) of the Constitution.
- Economic Survey 2025-26 projects formalisation rising from 60.4% to 75.5% by 2029-30.
- Projected job creation under the new codes: 77 lakh.
- Projected GDP contribution of new codes: +1.25% by 2029-30.
- Draft Central Rules for all four codes were released on 30 December 2025.
- Contract workers in India's factories constitute 42% of the factory workforce (2023).
- Direct factory employment fell from 61% (2011) to 47% (2023).
- Gig and platform workers gain first-ever statutory recognition under the Code on Social Security.
- The National Floor Wage is fixed by the Central Government under the Code on Wages.
- Nodal ministry for all four Labour Codes: Ministry of Labour & Employment.
- The new threshold for standing orders (Industrial Relations Code): establishments with 300+ workers (raised from 100).
- Regular CPSE employment declined by 30,000 workers in 2024 (Public Enterprises Survey 2025).
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper(s): Primarily GS-III (Indian Economy — Employment, Growth, Development); secondary GS-II (Governance, Social Justice — Labour Rights).
Syllabus headings: - GS-III: "Indian Economy and issues relating to Planning, Mobilisation of Resources, Growth, Development and Employment" - GS-II: "Government Policies and Interventions for Development in various sectors"; "Welfare schemes for vulnerable sections"
Plausible Mains Questions: 1. "The Economic Survey 2025-26 projects significant gains in formalisation and employment from India's new Labour Codes. Critically examine these projections in the light of structural trends in India's labour market." (250 words) 2. "India's four Labour Codes seek to balance flexibility for employers with protection for workers. Evaluate how effectively the codes address the challenge of informality in the Indian economy." (250 words) 3. "Discuss the constitutional and administrative challenges in implementing India's four Labour Codes, with special reference to the Concurrent List and state-level rule-making." (150 words)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Why Connected |
|---|---|
| Gig Economy & Platform Workers | Code on Social Security recognises gig workers; social security architecture for them is unresolved |
| Informal Sector & PLFS Data | Periodic Labour Force Survey is the key data source for formalisation metrics used in the Survey |
| Contract Labour (Regulation & Abolition) Act, 1970 | Being subsumed; comparison with new IR Code reveals regulatory regression points |
| National Floor Wage vs. State Minimum Wages | Core wage-setting architecture under Code on Wages; federal tension |
| Ease of Doing Business Reforms | Labour code rationale linked to India's global EODB ranking improvements |
| Public Enterprises Survey | Key data source for CPSE employment trends cited in critique |
| ILO Decent Work Agenda | International benchmark for evaluating whether codes meet global labour standards |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- Wrong year for Code on Wages: Many aspirants conflate it with 2020 (when the other three were enacted). The Code on Wages is 2019, not 2020.
- Confusing "notified" with "enacted": The codes were enacted in 2019-20 but formally notified for implementation only in November 2025 — a 5-year gap.
- Labour is NOT on the State List: It is on the Concurrent List — states must frame their own rules, creating delay; it is not a purely central subject.
- 77 lakh jobs is a projection, not an achieved figure: Prelims MCQs may test this; the number is a modelling output from the Economic Survey, not a scheme target.
- Inspector-cum-Facilitator is not the same as a labour court: It is an administrative first-level grievance mechanism, not a judicial body.
11. Sources
- [S1] India's New Labour Codes: 77 Lakh Jobs, Formalisation Boost & Worker Welfare Reforms — https://dailypioneer.com/news/indias-labour-codes-and-new-realities-for-workers — (Tier 4)
- [S2] Economic Survey 2025-26: Indian Markets Undergoing Structural Transformations, New Labour Codes To Catalyse Job Growth — https://www.etvbharat.com/en/bharat/economic-survey-2025-26-indian-markets-undergoing-structural-transformations-new-labour-codes-to-catalyse-job-growth-enn26012905332 — (Tier 4)
- [S3] Draft Rules for India's Four Labor Codes Open for Public Feedback — https://www.india-briefing.com/news/india-releases-draft-labor-code-rules-41658.html/ — (Tier 4)
- [S4] Economic Survey promises, impact of new labour codes — The Hindu (article excerpt, 13 March 2026, authored by Krishna Priya Choragudi, Azim Premji University) — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-03-13/ — (Tier 4)
- [S5] Myth of Formalisation: Economic Survey Projections and Governance Challenges in India's Labour Codes — https://www.livelaw.in/lawschool/articles/formalisation-economic-survey-projection-governance-challenges-labour-codes-529397 — (Tier 4)