Wages-Theories, Concepts, Components and Determination
Wages-Theories, Concepts, Components and Determination
Wages-Theories, Concepts, Components and Determination
DETERMINATION
In recent years wages have tended to increase in the Indian economy. It has led to
considerable concern among the policy makers, employers and trader unionists.
While employers in the public as well as private sector appear to view wage rise as
detrimental to economic growth, unions demand periodic wage increases for
neutralizing the effects of inflation and sharing the gains of productivity growth.
The term wages is not a simple as it appears, and some of the disagreement
that arises in discussing wages is due to the fact that people are talking about
different things. Most wage earners have an hourly rate of pay, usually referred to
as the base rate, but this is not necessarily the amount which the workers actually
receive. Many people work on a piece work or incentive basis, under which the
amount they receive depends on how they produce. Under an incentive system a
worker is expected to earn a good deal more than his base wage rate- indeed, it is
the expectation which gives him the incentive to maintain a high rate of output.
Workers in the past, as today, were employed for wages and wages were
central to the problems of industrial peace in those days as well. According to the
ancient authorities wages were the consideration for the performance of a contract
of service entered into between an employer and a workman. Wages in fact
depended on the bargaining capacities of both the employers and the workers. It
appears that wage rates were a result of a process of bargaining and time and work
were the two major considerations in their determination.
WAGE THEORIES:
One of the first wage theories came from Adam Smith. Who put forward the
labour theory that the full value of any commodity is the amount of labour it can
buy. His analysis conceived of labour as an undivided homogenous mass.
Smith could accord a central role to the theory of value precisely because he
was able to identify the problem. He said if it is labour that creates wealth, then
increases in the latter can take place under one of the following conditions:-
1. There is a rise in productivity of labour or
2. The number of productive workers increases compared to other members of
society.
This theory popularly known as the “Iron Law of Wages” did not envisage
increases in the means of subsistence which would enable the vicious circle to
be transcended and rested on static assumptions oblivions of demographic
transition processes which generate far reaching changes through the impact of
cultural forces on population growth. Further since wages represent only a
chain in the flow of resources, the questionable assumption of a fixed fund
almost akin to idle savings cannot satisfactorily explain wage levels at a time
when investible resources are often realized through an appreciation of market
conditions with market borrowings.
Marx accepted the ideas of Ricardo and Mill and a them of Marxian Wage
Theory is the reserve army of unemployed which is supposed to depress real
wages to the minimum subsistence level.
The classical economists explain the demand side of the wage theory by
treating the wage goods as a fixed wage fund and the supply side in terms of
labour availability which is expected to be influenced to an incremental extent
by the amount of extra wage fund available over the minimum subsistence
outlay so that equilibrium is conceived only at the minimum subsistence level.
In the Keynesian model, the wage rates are determined in the labour market
but the volume of employment is determined by forces outside the labour
market. The real wage rates equated with marginal productivity are adjusted to
whatever level of employment is generated at a given level of consumption and
investment.
The greater the excess supply of labour market is the less the rate of
change of money wages is to be; and the smaller the excess supply of labour is
the greater the rate of growth of money wages.
Wage Concepts:
Wage concepts have historically evolved from the state policy as well as the
judgements of the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court has taken specific positions
on some of the basic wage concepts.
1. Minimum Wage: No Industry has a right to exist unless it is able to pay its
workmen atleast a bare minimum wage. It is quite likely that in
underdeveloped countries wherein unemployment prevails on a very large
scale, unorganized labour may be available on starvation wages; but the
employment of labour on starvation wages cannot be encouraged or
favoured in a modern democratic welfare state. If an employer cannot
maintain his enterprise without cutting down the wages of his employees
below even a bare subsistence or minimum wage, he would have no right to
conduct his enterprise on such terms.
2. Living Wage: It would be obvious that the concept of living wage is not a
static concept it is expanding and the number of its constituents and their
respective contents are bound to expand and widen with the development
and growth of national economy. That is why it would be impossible to
attempt the task of determining the extent of the requirement of the said
concept. Indeed it may be true to say that in an underdeveloped country it
would be ideal to describe any wage structure as containing the ideals of a
living wage, though in some cases living wages may be paid.
The second principle is that wages must be fair, that is to say, sufficiently high to provide a
standard family with food, shelter, clothing, medical care, and education to children
appropriate to the workmen but not at rate exceeding his wage earning capacity in the class
of extablishment to which he belongs. A fair wage is thus related to the earning capacity and
workload. It must, however, be realized that ‘fair wage’ is not ‘living wage’ by which is
meant a wage which is sufficient to provide not only the essentials mentioned above but a
fair measure of frugal confort with an ability to provide for old age and evil days. ‘Fair
wage’ lies between the minimum wage, which must be paid in any event, and the ‘living
wage’ which is the goal.
1. Basic Wage:
2. Dearness Allowance:
It has been estimated that around 80% of employees in manufacturing
industries are covered by one system of Dearness Allowance or other. Even
in the unorganized sector the principle of D.A. has been introduced through
the Minimum Wages Act, 1948. There is, however, no definite estimation of
size of outlay on D.A. While the study group on wage policy set up by the
National Commission of Labour estimated the proportion of D.A. to wage
bill at about 30%, the Employers Federation of India estimated the
proportion in the manufacturing sector at 39%.
3. Bonus Payment:
The Bonus Commission viewed the concept of bonus as sharing
By the workers in the prosperity of the concern in which they are
employed. This has also the advantage that in the case of low paid
worker, such sharing in prosperity augments their earnings and so helps
to bridge the gap between the actual wage and the need based wage.
According to the Bonus Review Committee the concept of bonus is form
of profit sharing which had the incidental advantage of acting in effect as
a supplement to wages, these came to be established.
4. Fringe Benefits:
Fringe benefits have by now become an important part of the wage
system. Such benefits are the result of social development in recent years.
Even during the early years of industrialization the employers were
contributing to the welfare of the workers, but in recent years, labour
legislation has imposed statutory requirements. The welfare legislation
includes the Workmen’s Compensation Act, Factories Act, Provident Fund
and Bonus Schemes in Coal Mines, Employees State Insurance Act, and
Employees Provident Fund Act. The statutory benefits are supplemented by
a number of other provisions such as paid festival holidays, housing, profit
bonus, and medical assistance which are paid on a voluntary basis.
Despite the fact that fringe benefits are now being increasingly
provided by the employers in most industries, there is a vagueness about the
definition of fringe benefits. According to Reid and Robertson, the scope of
the term fringe benefits depends in part on whether cost to employer or
payment to employee is used as the criterion of definition. It is believed that
fringe benefits are probably more important as costs and thus include
holiday pay, sick pay, the cost the cost of occupational pensions and
employer contributions to various types of welfare plans.
1. Adjudication:
The Government labour policy supports compulsory adjudication system. Its
rationale for doing so is based on the following arguments.
a) It was feared that collective bargaining might result in work stoppages and
slowing down industrialization.
b) It was held that strikes would be used as a weapon by the policically
motivated trade unions disrupting the industrial relation system.
c) It was assumed that the trade unions were still weak at the plant level and
therefore, collective bargaining may not result in an equal trial of strength
between the unions and the management.
d) It was felt that in the absence of compulsory adjudication the state would be
handicapped in maintaining industrial peace.
e) It was hoped that compulsory adjudication would result in terms and
conditions of employment which may be considered fair and objective by
both workers and employers.
5. Wage Boards:
The concept of wage board was first enunciated by the Fair Wages
Committee. It was commended by the first Five Year Plan. The Second Plan
emphasized that a more acceptable machinery for setting wage disputes will
be one which gives the parties themselves a more responsible role in
reaching decisions.
In applying the system of payment by results, the Board shall keep in view
the need for fixing a minimum (fall back wage) and also to safeguard against
overwork and undue speed.
The Sinha study suggests certain implications for wage structure and
industrial relations. In general wage boards were not in a position to base their
recommendations on job evaluation. Consequently, either the customary skill
differentials were allowed or such differentials were widened. On the contrary,
inter-firm and inter-industry wage differentials tended to decline. Wage board
recommendations had significant implications for industrial relations. It was found
that while wage rates increased even the weaker units were not adversely affected.
Moreover, wage disputes were not generally raised during wage board
deliberations, although disputes did take place on account of interim relief’s. An
important implication of the wage board system was the growth of industry level
federations of both employers and unions.
It is obvious that the wage board method of wage fixation has clearly failed
to evolve a consistent set of guidelines to be followed at the plant level. This
method had the rudiments of an industry level bargaining process, yet it could not
operate efficiently primarily because of a lack of coordination among the wage
boards. Since the wage board recommendations affect both management and
unions, it is in their own interest to strengthen their respective federations and to
provide comprehensive information to these federations for an efficient discussion
at the wage board level.
6. Collective Bargaining:
The framing of a wage policy for any country involves the taking of specific stand
on various aspects of the economic development of the country, which can best be
done only through consensus arrived at in an organized manner.
The symposium on Wage Policy issues held by the International Institute for
Labour studies in October 1967, observed: “….the establishment of certain bodies,
suitably constituted and at the appropriate level, offers the best prospects of
formulating an agreed, acceptable, and effective wage policy for a developing
country.
All the problems cannot be solved simultaneously for they conflict with one
another. The fact of the matter is that, whether we like it or not, under the
circumstances now prevailing in most under developed countries, inequalities of
incomes are bound to remain for many more years to come- socialistic or no
socialistic pattern of society.
Keeping in view the need for uniformity in wage payments across regions,
industries and occupations, the Chakravarti Committee had suggested a National
wage structure on administered wage system….This involved working out a grade
structure based on skill differentials and fixation of wages for each grade. In this
structure, the total wage receivable by a worker or an employee may be made up of
the following: a) Minimum wage; b) Skill differentials depending on the grade; c)
Compensation for exceptional hazards for their exceptional disadvantages; d)
growth dividend; e) Dearness Allowance; f) Share in Profits.