1. Call to protect historically significant structures at Thirunelly temple in Kerala
Loss of heritage: ‘Vilakkumadom’, an exquisite granite structure, at the Sree Mahavishnu Temple at Thirunelly in Wayanad.
The Indian National Trust for Art and Cultural Heritage (INTACH) has urged the government to conserve the historically significant structures, including the 600-year-old ‘Vilakkumadom’, an exquisite granite structure, at the Sree Mahavishnu Temple at Thirunelly in Wayanad district of Kerala during the on-going renovation of the temple.
The renovation is being done by the Tourism Department at a cost of ₹3.8 crore.
V. Jayarajan and Archana Kamath, conveners of INTACH Kasaragod and Kozhikode chapters respectively, in a letter to Devaswom Minister K. Radhakrishnan and Malabar Devaswom Board president, expressed concern over the loss of historically significant valuable precincts including the ‘Vilakkumadom’.
“With its history tracing back to the 15th century AD , we observe that its key elements have not been valued during the ‘renovation’ process,” Dr. Jayarajan said. The possible completion of the ‘Vilakkumadom’ structure and the total destruction of ‘Chuttambalam’ had resulted in a loss of heritage creating a gap in its value and importance that could be forgotten in the future, he added.
The incomplete structure that stood as testimony to a rich cultural heritage has been remodelled in an insensitive way, he said.
2. On the Code on Social Security for platform-based gig workers
Means of living: Online food delivery workers organise a protest march to the Swiggy office in Ernakulam in 2022.
The labour codes passed in 2020 acknowledge gig workers as new occupational categories in the making, in a bid to keep India’s workforce secure as it embraces ‘new kinds of work’. But the question is whether these codes have enabled workers to ask for the pay they were promised?
The Ashok Gehlot led Rajasthan government has recently announced the Rajasthan Platform-based Gig Workers (Registration and Welfare) Bill, 2023, which has stringent provisions against errant aggregators as well as various welfare policies. This article dated October 8, 2020, by Aditi Surie, talks about the Union government’s Code on Social Security for gig workers which doles out benefits and not rights.
The new Code on Social Security allows a platform worker to be defined by their vulnerability — not their labour, nor the vulnerabilities of platform work.
Swiggy workers have been essential during the pandemic. Even so, they have faced a continuous dip in pay and no rewards for being essential workers. During the last six months, many platform workers have unionised under the All India Gig Workers Union and have protested day in and day out, deploring Swiggy for reducing their base pay from ₹35 to ₹10 per delivery order.
It has been truly remarkable to see the ‘food delivery’ identity being developed through collective action, just as that of Uber and Ola taxi drivers has been taking shape for a few years now. Stable terms of earning have been a key demand of delivery-persons and drivers through years of protests.
The three new labour codes passed by Parliament recently acknowledge platform and gig workers as new occupational categories in the making, in a bid to keep India’s young workforce secure as it embraces ‘new kinds of work’, like delivery, in the digital economy.
But do the codes let Swiggy workers ask for the pay that they were promised? No.
What a platform worker is allowed to claim as rights, responsibilities and working conditions that can be legally upheld is the key question in these codes, such as for factory workers, who have been an important industrial element in India and around the world. The specific issues of working in factories, the duration of time needed on a factory floor, and associated issues are recognised as the parameters for defining an ideal worker under most labour laws, and this has not shifted much.
Defining an ‘employee’
The Code on Wages, 2019, tries to expand this idea by using ‘wages’ as the primary definition of who an ‘employee’ is. The wage relationship is an important relationship in the world of work, especially in the context of a large informal economy. Even so, the terms ‘gig worker’, ‘platform worker’ and ‘gig economy’ appear elsewhere in the Code on Social Security.
Since the laws are prescriptive, what is written within them creates the limits to what rights can be demanded, and how these rights can be demanded. Hence, the categories and where they appear become key signs for understanding what kind of identity different workers can have under these new laws. Platform delivery people can claim benefits, but not labour rights. This distinction makes them beneficiaries of State programmes. This does not allow them to go to court to demand better and stable pay, or regulate the algorithms that assign the tasks. This also means that the government or courts cannot pull up platform companies for their choice of pay, or how long they ask people to work.
The main role of the laws for a ‘platform worker’ is to make available benefits and safety nets from the government or platform companies. Even though platforms are part of the idea of how work will evolve in the future, the current laws do not see them as future industrial workers.
No guarantees
In the Code on Social Security, 2020, platform workers are now eligible for benefits like maternity benefits, life and disability cover, old age protection, provident fund, employment injury benefits, and so on. However, eligibility does not mean that the benefits are guaranteed. None of these are secure benefits, which means that from time to time, the Central government can formulate welfare schemes that cover these aspects of personal and work security, but they are not guaranteed. Actualising these benefits will depend on the political will at the Central and State government-levels and how unions elicit political support.
For some States like Karnataka, where a platform-focused social security scheme was in the making last year, this will possibly offer some financial assistance by the Centre. However, that is not assured. The language in the Code is open enough to imply that platform companies can be called upon to contribute either solely or with the government to some of these schemes. But it does not force the companies to contribute towards benefits or be responsible for workplace issues.
The ‘platform worker’ identity has the potential to grow in power and scope, but it will be mediated by politicians, election years, rates of under-employment, and large, investment- heavy technology companies that are notorious for not complying with local laws.
But there are no guarantees for better and more stable days for platform workers, even though they are meant to be ‘the future of work’.
3. ‘Oil prices, El Nino key risks to inflation, growth outlook’
Downside risks to the official 6.5% GDP growth projection for this fiscal dominate, Ministry says in monthly report; flags milk, wheat and crude oil prices as posing risks to the outlook on inflation
The Finance Ministry on Tuesday warned that downside risks to the official 6.5% GDP growth projection for this year could dominate, as the prospect of El Nino conditions triggering a drought, along with geopolitical developments and concerns about global financial stability could affect the “favourable combination of growth and inflation outcomes currently anticipated”.
The OPEC+ grouping’s surprise production cut has seen oil prices rise in April, off their lows of low $70s per barrel in March, the Ministry said in its monthly economic review. “Further troubles in the financial sector in advanced nations can increase risk aversion in financial markets and impede capital flows. Forecasts of El Nino… have elevated the risks to Indian monsoon rains,” it noted, stressing the need to be vigilant on these potential risks.
Highlighting the easing of inflationary pressures, the Ministry however cautioned that volatile oil prices and constrained supplies of milk, hit by disease affecting millions of cattle, and wheat may affect the inflation trajectory.