Maruti chief calls for practical reforms in labour laws

PTI Updated - August 29, 2014 at 01:23 PM.

bl06_ahruv_maru+BL06_21_BHARGAVA.jp.jpg

Calling for practical reforms in labour laws, Maruti Suzuki India Chairman R C Bhargava says policy must allow employment of temporary workers in such a manner that the last to be hired becomes the first to be laid off during downturn but they must be paid subsistence wage.

The company, which is looking at 25-30 per cent of its total workforce to be temporary workers to provide flexibility during downturn, is already applying the last-come-first-go principle at its factories.

“The temporary workers whom we have recruited are exactly in the same manner, including the basic qualifications and then their training, for the regular worker. When there is a downturn, the guy who came in last is the first to be laid off, there is no pick and choose,” Bhargava told PTI in an interview.

He further said: “When demand picks up, we shall take back the last guy who was laid off, the last is the first to come back and when vacancies arrive because we expand or people retire whatever happens, only from these temporary workers we keep getting them permanent.”

On the overall policy, Bhargava said: “The labour law reforms I would like is a labour policy for recruitment on these lines of having temporary workers and all these on the lines of last-come-first-go kind of things; that all permanent workers come from these temporary workers and a provision of subsistence.”

Stressing on the need for providing assistance to laid-off temporary workers, he said: “When these people are laid off because of a downturn, there should be some mechanism by which they are given part of their wages at subsistence rate.”

On the significance of having temporary workers, he said a certain percentage of the total workforce need to be non-permanent to cater for the fluctuations and demands in the auto industry.

“It’s not steady production year round and year-to-year. You have seen the fluctuations. So if you have all permanent, then during the period production fell because of market condition, you would have a big problem because there would be people sitting idle doing nothing,” Bhargava said.

Published on August 29, 2014 07:06