The Hindu Editorial Vocabulary– April 27, 2023; Day 427
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Difficult Word/ PhraseContextual Sense
Gig A job 
Herald to announce publicly
Tiding news
Moonlighting Work a second job, usually after hours
Fledgling Young and inexperienced
Flash strike When workers go on a sudden strike without giving any prior notice to the employer
Envisage Form a mental image of something that is not present or that is not the case
Grievance A complaint about a (real or imaginary) wrong that causes resentment and is grounds for action
Piece rate A fixed-rate paid according to the quantity produced.
Corpus Capital as contrasted with the income derived from it
Schema A schematic or preliminary plan
Take off Get started

Promising Bill: On the Rajasthan Platform-based Gig (job) Workers (Registration and Welfare) Bill, 2023

Rajasthan’s initiative to set up a gig workers’ welfare board heralds (to announce publicly) good tidings (news)

With an estimated eight million people employed in an industry built on the back of the smartphone revolution, “gig” work has become a major source of jobs for youth in India. It goes without saying that in a country where informal labour and unemployment have defined the nature of the jobs market in the last decade, the gig economy has been a beneficial outlet of employment. This is especially true of youth and migrant workers, as they seek a ready and quick means of securing finances and flexible hours — an option used by informal workers who have used gigs for moonlighting (Work a second job, usually after hours). With growing smartphone use and a reliance on apps for daily needs and purposes, the gig economy is only set to flourish in terms of usage and opportunities. Yet, increased competition among platforms and the availability of a cheap labour force have led to a lowering of incentives for gig workers even as their workload and uncertainty of work hours have increased significantly relative to pay, which has also become insufficient for many. Adding this to the fact that gig workers are not recognised as “workers” but partners by most aggregating platforms and that they lack any social security or related benefits due to them as “workers”, working conditions have become increasingly harsh in an industry that is no longer a fledgling (Young and inexperienced) one. This is now evident in growing flash strikes (When workers go on a sudden strike without giving any prior notice to the employer) by gig workers.

Seen in this light, the decision by the Rajasthan government, to deliver a Rajasthan Platform-based Gig Workers (Registration and Welfare) Bill, 2023, should be welcomed, even if it will be introduced before the Assembly elections later this year. While the draft Bill envisages (Form a mental image of something that is not present or that is not the case) a “welfare board” that will design welfare policies and hear grievances (A complaint about a (real or imaginary) wrong that causes resentment and is grounds for action) of gig workers on a piece rate (A fixed rate paid according to the quantity produced) basis, the specificities of the policies and how they might benefit the workers are still unclear. The board is expected to work towards a social welfare corpus (Capital as contrasted with the income derived from it) which will be financed by a cess on the digital transactions made by consumers on the platforms that utilise the gig worker labour. This schema (A schematic or preliminary plan) is not unfamiliar — platform workers in the transport sector in Thailand and Malaysia, for instance, benefit from health and accident insurance as well as social security that is financed by a deduction of 2% for every ride. Recently, the Union government passed the Code on Social Security (one of four labour codes), which also allowed for some social security for gig workers, but the scheme only remains on paper without proper implementation. If Rajasthan’s pioneering draft Bill takes off (Get started), other States could be compelled to utilise similar measures to ensure the welfare of gig workers.

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