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Parliament passes bill to raise maternity leave to 26 weeks

Parliament passes bill to raise maternity leave to 26 weeks

Friday March 10, 2017 , 5 min Read

Women working in the organised sector will now be entitled to paid maternity leave of 26 weeks, up from 12 weeks, as Parliament today passed a bill in this regard that will benefit about 1.8 million women. The new law will apply to all establishments employing 10 or more people, and the entitlement will only be applicable for the first two children. For the third child, the entitlement will be for only 12 weeks.

Image: Shutterstock

The Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Bill, 2016 was passed by the Lok Sabha today, months after the Rajya Sabha approved the measure that takes India to the third position in terms of the number of weeks for maternity leave after Canada and Norway, where it is 50 weeks and 44 weeks respectively.

Piloting amendments to the old law, Labour Minister Bandaru Dattatreya said while framing the rules that he would try to ensure that maximum benefits reach pregnant women.

"This is my humble gift to women, a day after the world celebrated International Women's Day," he said after about a four-hour debate, during which some members demanded paternity benefits too, arguing that these days, most of the children are born in nuclear families where both the father and the mother have to take care of the child.

The Maternity Benefit Act, 1961, protects the employment of a woman during the time of her maternity and entitles her to full paid absence from work, to take care of her child. Among other things, the bill provides for 12 weeks of maternity leave to a woman who legally adopts a child below three months of age and a commissioning mother (defined as a biological mother) who uses her egg to have a surrogate child.

In such cases, the 12-week period of maternity leave will be calculated from the date the child is handed over to the adoptive or commissioning mother. The Bill also requires every establishment with 50 or more employees to provide creche facilities within a prescribed distance. The woman will be allowed four visits to the creche in a day. This will include her interval for rest.


Also read: Rajya Sabha passes bill to raise maternity leave to 26 weeks


It has also made a provision under which an employer can permit a woman to work from home, if the nature of work assigned permits her to do so. This option can be availed of, after the period of maternity leave, for a duration that is mutually decided by the employer and the woman.

Observing that labour is in the Concurrent List of the Constitution, the minister appealed to the state governments to play an active role to ensure that all benefits reach women. He said the amendments were "progressive" in nature and would have a positive impact on women's participation in the workforce and improve their work-life balance.

It would be expected of the employer to inform women about the maternity benefits at the time of employment, Dattatreya said. He appreciated the role played by some states like Tamil Nadu, which are providing benefits over and above what is mandated in the central statutes.

The amendments would ensure that full maternal care is provided during the full bloom period and will encourage more women to join the workforce in the organised sector, he added. The central government has already amended its service rules and is providing 26 weeks maternity leave to its employees. The Minister also clarified that women working in Special Economic Zones (SEZs) would be entitled to all benefits of the legislation.

Responding to concerns expressed by members that benefits would be restricted to only 10 percent of women, those working in the organised sector, Dattatreya said that the government has taken a host of steps for the welfare of unorganised workers. With these changes, India would rank high among the nations providing maternity benefits to women, he said.

Indian women will get more maternity leave than what is provided in developed countries like Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, and South Korea, the Minister said. Participating in the debate, Sushmita Dev (Congress) said that since the amendment raises the period of maternity leave to 26 weeks from the present 12, it could act as a deterrent for the private sector to employ women in the workforce. She said,

"Since the employer has to pay the salary during the leave period, the amendment might turn out to be counterproductive. An innovative thing to do would be to bring in paternity benefits."

She said that such a benefit can also be extended to single fathers who adopt a child. She said only 1.8 million pregnant ladies will benefit from the amendments to the bill, as 90 percent of the women workforce is in the unorganised sector.

Pritam Munde (BJP) said a father also has equal responsibility towards the child and that paternity benefits would help a couple raise their child together, as a majority of families are now nuclear. Ratna De Nag (TMC) too made a case for paternity benefits, and said her state government in West Bengal is already providing paternity leave for 30 days.

Tathagata Satpathy (BJD) termed the Maternity Benefit (Amendment) Bill, 2016, a social bill and said that instead of reducing the period of leave from 26 weeks to 12 weeks after the second child, the Centre should state that there would be 26 weeks leave up to the third child, and after that no leave would be provided. He too sought paternity benefits. The Rajya Sabha had passed the bill in August last year.