The Guardian Weekly

Covid leaves labourers with less money and fewer rights

By Amrit Dhillon AMRIT DHILLON IS A WRITER BASED IN DELHI

When Ram Yadav fled India’s strict countrywide lockdown imposed in March 2020, he was one of the lucky ones, managing to hitch rides from Delhi on trucks going in the direction of his village near Kanpur, 400km away.

An estimated 10 million workers were forced to walk home, travelling via fields, forests and highways in the scorching sun.

Yadav, 34, a construction worker, vowed never to return to the city. “I felt betrayed twice: by society, because no one around me lent a hand – my landlord kicked me out – and by the state. I trusted [the prime minister Narendra] Modi to help me in a once-in-a-lifetime crisis,” he said.

But when he failed to find work in his village, he had no choice but to return to the city, only to find himself in an even worse situation than before. Like millions of others, he is poorer, hungrier and feels abandoned in the wake of the pandemic.

An estimated 400 million people work in India’s informal sector, on low daily wages and with no contract, pension, paid holidays or health benefits. The vast majority are not unionised.

Labour economist KR Shyam Sundar says pay and working hours have worsened. “This is partly because employers are taking advantage of their desperation – workers will starve if they don’t work – and partly because the Indian economy has yet to recover from the losses of the pandemic, so jobs are scarce and employers are looking to cut whatever they can,” he said.

Yadav says he is paid 450 rupees ($5.50) a day instead of the 600 rupees he earned before lockdown.

“Loads of us were in the queue for my job. The contractor said if I didn’t want 450 rupees, then others would be happy to take it,” said Yadav.

Across the country, a vast army of wage hunters is searching for jobs. Unemployment has risen to almost 8%, according to the Centre for Monitoring the Indian Economy.

In August, Modi gave a speech to mark 75 years of independence. “I have been able to understand your happiness and sorrows,” he declared. “I could sense your soul calling about the hopes and aspirations you have. With whatever I could embrace of your dreams, I immersed myself fully in empowering those countrymen who were left behind and deprived from being a part of the mainstream.”

Yadav ignored the speech. “I’ve realised it’s just words. Modi imposed the lockdown without even making sure that I had a roof over my head and something to eat. Why should I listen to his speeches?” he asked.

Chandan Kumar, coordinator for the Working People’s Coalition, in Mumbai, says migrant workers are powerless in the face of exploitation, unable to speak the local language and working in premises that have not been safety checked.

“They don’t even feature in the records of the local state government. They are invisible,” he said.

The lack of bargaining power has made life harder for Varun Sharma, 16, one of the countless young men who deliver groceries by bike in the capital. He went home during the Covid second wave in March 2021, returning last December.

“When I came back, uncle [his employer] paid me the same wage, but I have to work till 9pm instead of 7pm. I have to send money to my family in Bihar so that they can eat, so I had to accept the terms,” said Sharma.

Sundar notes three changes in workers’ behaviour and hopes. One is that migrant workers feel so abandoned by the state it determines decisions on where to work.

“Many now refuse to go to a city where they don’t know anybody, even if the wages are acceptable,” he said.

The second is that workers are so desperate they are settling for wages they used to reject.

“Pre-pandemic, workers would not work for less than the ‘reservation wage’ [an economic term meaning the lowest wage rate a worker is willing to accept] but now they are prepared to accept it,” said Sundar.

The third consequence is the loss of opportunity. Informal workers used to dream about moving to a salaried job with social security, paid holidays and health benefits.

“That dream is now beyond their grasp. Not only are there no jobs, the lucky few to be permanent workers are holding on to their jobs for dear life,” he said.

‘I felt betrayed twice: by society, as no one lent me a hand – and by the state’

Ram Yadav Construction worker

Spotlight South Asia

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2022-12-02T08:00:00.0000000Z

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https://theguardianweekly.pressreader.com/article/282110640624536

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