Female Labour in Tea Plantations Labour
Female Labour in Tea Plantations Labour
Female Labour in Tea Plantations Labour
Ashmita Sharma
INTRODUCTION
Plantation labour, in contrast to the characteristics of both industrial and
agricultural labour, is unique in a number of ways. Based on the cultiva-
tion of a type of crop, the plantation, as defined by the Plantation Labour
Act (PLA) 1951,1 creates a distinction between the plantation labour force
and the agricultural labour force. The former is more akin to industrial
labourers who are also wage earners, without a connection to the land
they work on. However, the plantation labour force is differentiated from
its industrial counterpart by: the seasonal nature of their work; low wage
levels; permanently settled residence on the plantations; mode of pay-
ment; mechanisms of labour control; and geographical location away from
the cities. As a result of these variations, the plantation labour force sits
between agriculture and industry.
A. Sharma ()
Advanced Centre for Women’s Studies, School of Development Studies,
Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS), Mumbai, India
e-mail: ashmitasharma31@gmail.com
Procurement of Labourers
From the start, given the intensive nature of the labour processes on tea
plantations, it was understood that labour was the tea industry’s major
mainstay. Although the Nagas and the Singphos were already employed on
the tea estates, the British East India Company’s administration was initially
convinced that only Chinese tea growers could make tea growing fruitful in
the region (Sharma 2006). When the efforts to import Chinese labourers to
work on the tea plantations of Assam proved futile, British planters turned
their attention to procuring labourers locally and from neighbouring areas
like Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh
through sardars (male supervisory staff in the plantations) and individual
agents (Weiner 1978). The Adivasis (original inhabitants or indigenous
people) in these areas were undergoing dispossession of their lands and live-
lihoods with the incursion of outsiders, the dikus (outsiders or foreigners),
merchants and landlords (Chatterjee 2003). Adivasis were alienated from
their lands by these politically and economically dominant groups, which
compelled them to seek work as plantation labourers in Assam and North
Bengal. However, plantation owners soon realised that these labour pro-
curement channels met with poor results, as recruited labourers escaped
from plantations before the termination of their contracts.
Work and Family
Under capitalism, while the division of labour is constructed in terms of
class position, it is reinforced and mutually constituted by gender, caste,
race and other such social distinctions. Patriarchy coupled with capitalism
systematically devalues women’s work both inside and outside the home.
As we shall see, women’s engagement in the social reproduction of the
family was seen as both invisible and unacknowledged labour. While wom-
en’s role as tea pickers was glorified, their simultaneous responsibilities
at home remained unaccounted for. Women workers of Majuli expressed
how they were compelled to do double the work of men on the plantation
for a large part of the year, that is, as a housewife and as a full time labourer
(see also in this context, Boserup 1970).
Suboti Tanti, a permanent tea leaf plucker said:
My daily routine in the garden begins early morning at 3:00 am. I wake up,
take a bath and get down to begin my household chores for the day. I clean
the house first, fetch water, clean the used pots and then cook for myself and
my children. Since the plucking section is … quite a distance from my home,
FEMALE LABOUR IN TEA PLANTATIONS: LABOUR PROCESS AND LABOUR… 115
I pack my lunch so that I do not have to walk all the way back home or
starve for food in the field. I cook enough food so that it’s sufficient for my
children as well. I have to take care of everything on my own. I do not even
earn enough [money] but I am still trying to educate my children. I reach
the plucking section by 7:30 am or [at the] latest by 8:00 am. After spending
the entire day in the field we disperse from work at 5:00 pm or 6:00 pm in
the evening. We work overtime but never get paid for [doing so]. After get-
ting back home my routine [reverts] back to square one. Once work in the
plucking section is over, work at home begins. This is the story of my life.3
This is the daily routine of Suboti Tanti. Describing the daily routine of
the female estate workers using this account is important for two reasons:
firstly, this routine is not unique to Suboti Tanti’s life, it describes the lives
of thousands of tea leaf pickers working at Majuli Tea Estate. Secondly,
this account provides us with an understanding of the various types of
tasks and expectations a woman worker is confronted with on a daily basis.
The men on the estate supported the natural assignment of their role as
breadwinners and that of their wives as caregivers. Such a situation not only
made the lives of women difficult, but also created a fretful atmosphere,
with mounting pressure on women to perform better in both the work-
place and the domestic space. This performance pressure stemmed from
the gendered myths on which the plantation system rests, that women
workers were the best workers and served as nurturers of the tea garden.
The above narrative also suggests the importance of discussing the grow-
ing incidence of everyday violence confronted by plantation workers.
Since plantations are located in remote areas, they often become inacces-
sible to resident and non-resident workers, particularly women, and par-
ticularly in the evenings. The lack of infrastructure—schools and colleges,
market places, hospitals, roads, street lighting, toilets and so on—within
the plantation area also compels workers to travel long distances to meet
their daily needs.
118
A. SHARMA
Table 6.1 Distribution of male and female workers in the field by work status, Majuli Tea Estate, 2013–2014, in number
and per cent
Male–Field Female–Field
Work status Number of Percentage Labour Percentage Number of Percentage Labour Percentage share
workers share of days share of workers share of days of labour days
workers labour days workers
that the wage rate for daily workers during the year 2013–2014 was Rs.
84 for an eight-hour work day, increased to Rs. 94 in the year 2014–2015,
which was much lower than the national minimum wage fixed at Rs. 137 per
day and the minimum wage for unskilled tea plantation workers in Assam
which was Rs. 169 per day.6 Furthermore, for certain on-field operations
like pesticide application, men were paid five rupees more than women.
The difference in the plantation work schedule for men and women
workers resulted in male workers being able to earn extra cash because
male workers were mostly involved in task-based work, which they fin-
ished within a few hours in the morning. This left them with the opportu-
nity to either engage in additional non-plantation horticultural activities,
such as being a casual wage labourer, home-based vegetable gardening or
cultivating small-scale tea gardens of their own. Studies by scholars like
Samarasinghe (1993) confirmed the same for workers in Sri Lanka.
Payment in the tea garden was generally based on piece-rates related
to the completion of allotted tasks. Generally, during the earlier years of
the plantation industry, the output targets set by planters were extremely
high (Gupta 1986). Sunita Sawtal, an ex-casual tea garden worker stated:
‘[Previously] when I was working, we were given niric [for] plucking leaves.
[Therefore], when the tasks [of] a worker [had been] completed, [they]
would be off from work for the rest of the day. We would generally start
work at 8:00 am in the morning and [be] free by 2:00 pm in the after-
noon. Nowadays, under the time regime, after finishing in one section of the
garden, the workers are sent to pluck in another part. [This way] they end
up working the whole day [until] 5:00 pm in the evening.’7
‘[It] was easier and more convenient [previously], because we would wrap up
all our work in the garden quite early … [However, this] was not the case [for]
all our fellow workers. Not everyone could move their hands at the same pace.
While those who finished work would leave early, others [who moved more
slowly] [were] left behind. This was the shortcoming of the niric system.’8
was implicit in the nature of piece wages that individuals and groups could
earn different amounts (Ramachandran 1990).
‘We do not get paid for the quantity we pluck. The hazira babus are very
shrewd. Even if we have plucked over 23 [kilograms], they make it out to be
23 only and [no] more! When we [try to make] them … tell us the reading,
they [chase] us away.’9
In this context, another casual woman tea leaf plucker, Monti Tanti,
who resided in a nearby basti stated:
‘Since we are illiterate we have no clue as to what the reading on the meter
[really is], because we cannot read the numbers that appear on the auto-
matic machines. The introduction of these weighing machines has made our
lives more miserable. Since we have been associated with the tea estates for
long, we do [have an estimated idea] of the quantity we pluck every day. At
times we feel that … if we are able to earn the daily hazira (daily wage ),
[this] is [enough]. The babus reduce the incentive for us to further increase
our output.’10
FEMALE LABOUR IN TEA PLANTATIONS: LABOUR PROCESS AND LABOUR… 123
The lack of familiarity with technology, their own lack of access to train-
ing and the discriminatory behaviour of supervisors reflect the ways in
which occupational discrimination has been perpetuated and reproduced
through the lived experiences of women. Gender prejudices and patriar-
chal norms not only justified the subordination of women and their work
but also normalised it, both ideologically and structurally (Kurian and
Jayawardena 2013).
Table 6.2 Percentage share of workers in field and factory by sex, Majuli Tea
Estate, 2013–2014, in per cent
Sex Field Percentage share Factory Percentage share
three, which included the night shift. With the dwindling of tea leaves in
the field by the end of November/mid-December, factory operations also
closed down. During this time, women factory workers were temporarily
removed; only a small number of men involved in machine overhauling
remained in the factory.
Thirdly, the spatial ordering of women in the field followed a certain
pattern of organisation, where working batches of women were employed
along open spaces of field. Such a positioning of women’s dols in the field
allowed for a sense of camaraderie to develop, in contrast to the enclosed
space of the factory (Chatterjee 2003). The work schedule of the women
leaf pluckers was of particular significance, not only because of the length
of the day spent in the field, but also to indicate how they strategically
made use of the given time frame to form informal collectives within
the field landscape, which in turn gave rise to revolutionary ideas. For
example, many women leaf pluckers have reported the forming of secret
groups, despite the inescapable gaze of the sardar. The women were of
the opinion that this was the reason why many of them who were slightly
vocal about the problems faced by their fellow workers, bore the brunt of
the high-handedness of management.
Despite the striking gender imbalance between field and factory, a large
number of women had previously been employed in the factory. Sorting
large bamboo sieves was done by women workers, because it was thought
that sorting and sieving were tasks best suited to women. Small groups of
women were assigned the task of sorting tea leaves by hand. However, the
introduction of machines led to their gradual replacement. Responding to
the impact of mechanisation on women’s employment, Suboti Tanti stated:
Landless 87 56.5 0 0
0.2–0.4 18 11.7 6.6 7.4
0.4–0.8 19 12.3 13.4 15.1
0.8–2.0 21 13.6 33 37.2
2.0–4.0 5 3.2 14.6 16.4
>4.0 4 2.6 21.2 23.9
All size class 154 100.0 88.8 100.0
Source: Household Survey, Majuli Tea Estate, 2014
Since the extent of land owned by the households was marginal there was
no leasing out or mortgaging out of land. Only 2.6 per cent of the house-
holds had mortgaged in 4.8 per cent of the land.
Table 6.4 shows the distribution of households according to land own-
ership. Land ownership is defined as the total land owned and self-culti-
vated, including leased out and mortgaged out land. While more than half
of the households (56.5 per cent) were landless, only four households (2.6
per cent) owned 21.2 acres (23.9 per cent) of the total land owned (see
Table 6.4). While the bottom 50 per cent of households were landless, the
top five per cent owned 83.5 per cent of the total land owned. As land size
progressively increased, the share of households owning land dwindled.
While the total land area of the Majuli Tea Estate was 1,621 acres, the
effective area, that area under tea cultivation, was 992 acres.
It is important to note that even in households that owned land, women
did not have independent ownership and control over whatever land was
owned. As Agarwal (1998) asserts, the question is not only about wom-
en’s access to cultivable land, but also about its management and control.
During the field survey, it was found that women were hardly aware of
household land ownership. Rama Tanti stated: ‘We have land but I don’t
know how much. I am not sure if we own the land or we have leased in
from the company. I will have to ask my husband. He takes care of all that.
I can only tell you about domestic assets like utensils, jewellery etc.’16
This shows the unequal relationship that men and women have to
household assets. This disparity in resource ownership not only affects
women’s bargaining position within the household, but also their deci-
sion-making power in relation to family and matters outside the home.
FEMALE LABOUR IN TEA PLANTATIONS: LABOUR PROCESS AND LABOUR… 127
CONCLUSION
This paper analyses female wage labourers within the existing system of
production in tea plantations and traces changes in their position along-
side larger structural changes in production. Taking the case of Majuli Tea
Estate in the Tinsukia district of Upper Assam, this study found historical
128 A. SHARMA
changes that had important consequences for women in: the patterns of
work in field and factory; nature of tasks performed by men and women;
system and mode of wage payment; structure of the plantation labour force;
and access to land rights. It can be seen that through these changes, the
plantation regime has successfully managed to retain or sustain its female
labour force, most importantly through labour control, which has been a
recurring phenomenon from the colonial era to contemporary times.
Women have become the backbone of the plantation economy over
the years. However, the basis on which the plantation system was estab-
lished and the basis on which it exists, indicates and highlights a phenom-
enal degree of individual and familial exploitation. This has perpetuated
the exploitation of its female labour force in particular. Though the
predominance of women in the tea industry was recognised, the chapter
analysed how pre-defined gender roles were binding in relation to both
men and women in the plantations. While gendered wage differentials
were removed, differences in wage rates for gendered segregated tasks in
the field and in the factory persist.
The nature of plantation work and the system of payment underwent
a change, with time becoming an integral part of task-based work, espe-
cially for women leaf pluckers. Workers in the factory were paid overtime
on an hourly basis. While a large number of women had previously been
employed in the factory, mechanisation of factory operations led to their
gradual replacement. There were internal differences within the female
labour force, with a hierarchy created between permanent and tempo-
rary workers. While temporary workers always occupied a subsidiary posi-
tion, women were more affected due to the increasing casualisation of the
female labour force during peak plucking seasons. Although the terms
permanent and casual are relative in their definition, permanency gave
some guarantee of work for a certain period of time, which was lacking for
the casual majority.
While this chapter explored the labour process and the various forms of
labour control, the threat of violence shaped the everyday lives of men and
women working and living in Majuli and was intrinsic to this very concept.
This everyday violence not only instilled a sense of fear among the workers
but also curtailed their freedom of movement and rightful access to the
plantation space.
Lastly, this chapter attempted to discuss the subsistence economy
as an important feature of the plantation system. The original idea of
the subsistence economy was to ensure the social reproduction of the
FEMALE LABOUR IN TEA PLANTATIONS: LABOUR PROCESS AND LABOUR… 129
NOTES
1. (a) Any land within five hectares or more that is used or intended to be
used for growing tea, cinchona, cardamom, coffee or rubber and in which
15 or more people are or were employed on any day of the preceding
twelve months;(b) Any piece of land within five hectares or more that is
used for growing any plant referred to above, in which 15 or more people
are or were employed on any day of the preceding twelve months, after
obtaining the approval of the Central Government, the State Government
by notification in the Official Gazette (Tea Board of India 2015, http://
www.teaboard.gov.in/pdf/policy/Plantationsper cent20Labourper cen-
t20Act_amended.pdf).
2. Name of the plantation has been changed.
3. Interview with Suboti Tanti, 20 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
4. In their study of the employment of women in world market factories,
Elson and Pearson (1981) argue that women are brought together in the
factory by virtue of their particularised gender ascriptive relations.
5. Interview with Monti Tanti, 20 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
6. http://www.paycheck.in/main/salary/minimumwages, http://pib.nic.
in/newsite/PrintRelease.aspx?relid=123038 and Notification No. ACL
43/2004/, Office of the Labour Commissioner, Government of Assam,
March 2013.
7. Interview with Sunita Sawtal, 27 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
8. Interview with Sonali Porja, 24 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
9. Interview with a group of women leaf pluckers, 18 August 2014, Majuli
Tea Estate.
10. Interview with Monti Tanti, 17 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
130 A. SHARMA
11. Interview with Suboti Tanti, 16 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
12. In plantation economies, time-expired coolies, or ex-tea garden workers,
are those whose contracts for working in a tea plantation have expired. In
the Brahmaputra Valley, some of these workers re-engaged in tea planta-
tion work by signing local agreements, while others chose to live their lives
as independent cultivators.
13. A major characteristic of the leased lands distributed among the tea planta-
tion workers was that, since vast tracks were water-clogged lands lying in
lowland areas, they were unsuitable for tea cultivation.
14. Interview with Devi Raotia, 20 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
15. Settlements of tea workers within the plantation provided by the tea
company.
16. Interview with Rama Tanti, 25 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
17. Interview with Lata Tanti, 26 August 2014, Majuli Tea Estate.
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