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The Half-built Ladder of India’s Labour Codes

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

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November 30, 2025

India loves grand reforms the way it loves grand weddings—loud, glittering, photo-ready, and utterly confusing.

- Anand Neelakantan

The Half-built Ladder of India’s Labour Codes

The new labour codes, stitched together from 29 older laws and unveiled as the biggest labour reform since Independence, fit perfectly into this tradition. They promise a new social contract for workers in the world’s fastest-changing labour market. But the more one reads, the more it feels like a contract written in invisible ink. The government hails them as the dawn of a modern India: universal minimum wages, simplified compliance, social security for gig workers, and broader formalisation. All true. All admirable. And yet, something about the whole structure feels like a house built on uneven ground—impressive from outside, unstable once you step in.

Let's begin with the good news, for there is some. The most striking reform is the statutory recognition of gig and platform workers. For years, these delivery riders, app-based drivers, freelance technicians and digital pieceworkers lived in a legal no-man’s land, invisible to the welfare net. Now, aggregators must contribute a portion of their turnover towards social security funds intended to insure and protect them.

The second major win is the National Floor Wage—a baseline below which no state may go. Unlike the old system that covered only “scheduled employments,” this establishes a universal floor, theoretically protecting even workers in sectors the old laws forgot. Together with mandatory appointment letters and strengthened rules for timely wage payment, the codes do bring seriousness to labour rights, at least on paper.

The New Indian Express Bengaluru からのその他のストーリー

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

Adoption agency CEO: Are orphans falling into hands of traffickers?

IN a loaded statement on child adoptions in the country, Bhavana Saxena, Member Secretary and CEO, Central Adoption Resource Authority (CARA), said, “Is there any loophole in the legal system? We need to find out where the orphaned, abandoned and surrendered children are ending up. Why is the registration in the State Adoption Resource Centre and Child Care Institutions so low? Last year, in India, there were only 4,515 adoptions. It isa low figure though it is the highest in the last ten years. Are there leakages in the legal system through which these children are falling into the hands of traffickers? It is time that various departments work together and fix this issue.”

time to read

1 min

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

The High Price of Higher Towers

It’s the Age of Redevelopment. Cities have plunged into the idea, and skylines are changing as higher and higher towers pierce the sky. On their part, the blueprints of sky-high buildings that will replace quaint bungalows or outdated tenements set hopes soaring higher than the wildest dreams.

time to read

2 mins

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

Former B'desh PM Khaleda Zia seriously ill, says aide

BANGLADESH Nationalist Party (BNP) chairperson and former premier Khaleda Zia is still “seriously ill”, and may require treatment abroad if her condition stabilises, a close aide said on Saturday.

time to read

1 min

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

An Ayurvedic Apothecary

There's a quiet thrill in stepping onto a trail just as the hills wake up. As you begin your trek through Gold Valley in Maharashtra's Lonavala, the clouds play hide-and-seek. A Blue Mormon flutters past, disappearing into the dense canopy. The loud calls of Indian Grey Hornbills invites you deeper into this pocket of the Sahyadri Hills, on Western Ghats.

time to read

1 mins

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

How KISS University is Rewriting India’s Tribal Story

he1990s presented India and Odisha with converging crises. Globalization arrived with promises, but for tribal communities, liberalisation, industrialization and globalisation (LPG Raj) meant displacement.

time to read

3 mins

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

Ukraine behind attacks on Black Sea tankers transporting Russian oil: source

UKRAINE was responsible for attacks on two oil tankers in the Black Sea that it believed were covertly transporting sanctioned Russian oil, a Ukrainian security source said.

time to read

1 mins

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

2 Palestinian children killed by Israel: Gaza hosp

ISRAELI fire killed two Palestinian children in the southern Gaza on Saturday, a hospital said, marking the latest deaths of Palestinians as a shaky ceasefire with Hamas held.

time to read

1 min

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

User-friendly app: EC seeks public response

THE Election Commission (EC) has invited all citizens to download the ECINet App and give suggestions to make the application more user-friendly till the 27th of next month.

time to read

1 min

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

Manipur displaced people returning home clash with police, two injured

A journalist and a policeman were injured in Manipur on Saturday when internally displaced persons (IDPs), seeking to return to their original homes, clashed with security personnel.

time to read

1 min

November 30, 2025

The New Indian Express Bengaluru

Tracking names from ’03 voter list huge challenge for many in U’khand

THE office of the Uttarakhand Chief Electoral Officer (CEO) has released the 2003 voter list for the special intensive revision (SIR) of poll rolls, but tracing names from that period is a challenge for many residents.

time to read

1 mins

November 30, 2025

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