He said the government's plan to introduce a single minimum wage across the country may hurt businesses in smaller towns.
India
should ease norms for hiring and firing workers to make it easier for
companies to do business in the country, according to a former
adviser to Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government.
Easing
the rules are crucial for employers, as their primary aim is not to
fire workers, Arvind
Panagariya, the head of government think-tank NITI Aayog, said in
an interview in New Delhi.
“You
need consistency across labour laws.”
Finance
Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, in her maiden budget this month,
proposed combining multiple laws governing workers to form four sets
of labor codes to improve the ease of doing business.
But
what’s needed is the reform
of labor laws and not just streamlining of existing ones, said
Panagariya.
He
said the government’s plan to introduce a single minimum wage
across the country may hurt businesses in smaller towns considering
the wide differences in costs across urban and rural India.
It
could especially hurt small exporters and erode their competitiveness
globally.
Modi’s
government, which was re-elected for a second straight five year term
in May, can do more to help grow the economy, Panagariya said, adding
that some of India’s labor laws are probably more than 100 years
old. Almost all of them are more than 30 years old.
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