Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Factories Act, 1948 (Act No. 63 of 1948), as amended by the Factories (Amendment) Act, 1987 (Act 20 of 1987), served to assist in formulating national policies in India with respect to occupational safety and health in factories and docks in India. It deals with various problems concerning safety, health, efficiency and well-being of the ...
Section 6 requires that people are paid in money rather than in kind. The law also provides the tax withholdings the employer must deduct and pay to the central or state government before distributing the wages. [22] The Minimum Wages Act 1948 sets wages for the different economic sectors that it states it will cover. It leaves a large number ...
An Act to amend the Factories Act, 1937, and provide for matters consequential on the amendment of that Act. Citation: 11 & 12 Geo. 6. c. 55: Dates; Royal assent: 30 July 1948: Text of statute as originally enacted
Coal Mines Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act: 1948: 46 Oil Fields (Regulation and Development) Act: 1948: 53 Territorial Army Act: 1948: 56 Central Silk Board Act: 1948: 61 Reserve Bank (Transfer of Public Ownership) Act: 1948: 62 Factories Act: 1948: 63 Delhi and Ajmer-Merwara Land Development Act: 1948: 66 Mangrol and Manavadar ...
[1] [2] The Act replaces 13 old central labour laws. The bill was passed by the Lok Sabha on 22 September 2020, and the Rajya Sabha on 23 September 2020. [ 3 ] The bill received the presidential assent on 28 September 2020, but the date of coming into force is yet to be notified in the official gazette.
This is a category of articles concerning acts of Parliament (laws enacted by the Parliament of India in 1948). For more general discussion of Indian legal topics, see Category:Law of India and its other subcategories.
The Trade Unions Act 1926 provided recognition and protection for a nascent India In 1997, India had about 59,000 trade unions registered with the government of India. [30] Of these only 9,900 unions filed income and expenditure reports and claimed to represent 7.4 million workers.
The Licence Raj or Permit Raj (rāj, meaning "rule" in Hindi) [1] is a pejorative for the system of strict government control and regulation of the Indian economy that was in place from the 1950s to the early 1990s. Under this system, businesses in India were required to obtain licences from the government in order to operate, and these ...