The Code on Social Security, 2020

The Code on Social Security, 2020 โ€“ Educational Guide

๐Ÿ“œ The Code on Social Security, 2020 โ€” Educational Guide

Act No. 36 of 2020  |  For LL.B Students & Legal Learners  |  Simple Human Language

โš ๏ธ EDUCATIONAL DISCLAIMER: This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For legal matters, consult a qualified legal professional.

๐Ÿ“˜ Chapter I โ€“ Preliminary (Sections 1โ€“3)

This chapter is the foundation of the whole Code. It tells us what this law is called, where it applies, and who it covers. Think of it like the introduction page of a textbook.

๐Ÿ”– Section 1: Short Title, Extent, Commencement and Application

  • Name of the Act: "The Code on Social Security, 2020" (Act No. 36 of 2020, passed on 28 September 2020).
  • Where it applies: All of India โ€” every state, every union territory.
  • When it starts: The Central Government decides the date(s) by publishing a notification in the Official Gazette. Different chapters can start on different dates.
  • Who it covers: The First Schedule lists which chapters apply to which types of establishments (factories, shops, construction sites, etc.).
๐Ÿ“ Real-Life Example:
Suppose Ramesh runs a textile factory in Surat with 25 workers. Under Section 1(4), the First Schedule tells us that Chapter III (EPF) applies to his factory once notified. If Ramesh and most workers agree to join EPF voluntarily, Section 1(5) allows the PF Commissioner to extend it to him even before the usual threshold.
โญ KEY POINT: Once a chapter applies to an establishment, it CONTINUES to apply even if workers drop below the minimum number later (Section 1(8)).

๐Ÿ”– Section 2: Important Definitions

Section 2 defines over 90 terms. Let us understand the most important ones in simple language:

Term Simple Meaning Example
EmployeeAny person paid wages by an establishment, directly or through a contractor, for any type of workSuresh working in a textile mill for โ‚น15,000/month is an employee
EmployerThe person or company that hires employees and is responsible for paying contributionsThe owner of the textile mill = employer
WagesBasic pay + Dearness Allowance + Retaining Allowance. Does NOT include HRA, overtime, bonus, etc.If basic = โ‚น10,000, DA = โ‚น3,000 โ†’ wages = โ‚น13,000
EstablishmentAny place where industry/trade/business is carried on; includes factories, mines, plantationsA call centre in Bengaluru = establishment
Gig WorkerSomeone who earns money doing tasks outside the traditional employer-employee bondA Swiggy delivery partner is a gig worker
Platform WorkerSomeone who gets work through an online platform and is paid for specific tasksAn Uber driver using the app = platform worker
Unorganised WorkerA home-based/self-employed/wage worker in the unorganised sector (enterprise <10 workers)A tailor working from home = unorganised worker
Social SecurityProtection measures for health care and income security in old age, sickness, work injury, maternity, etc.PF, ESI, Gratuity, Maternity Benefit = social security
ContributionMoney paid by employer (and sometimes employee) to the PF Board or ESICEmployer deposits 12% of wages to EPF every month
Fixed Term EmploymentA job with a fixed contract period but with same pay/benefits as permanent employees proportionatelyIT firm hires a developer for 1-year project with same benefits as permanent staff
FactoryPremises with 10+ workers using power or 20+ workers without power for manufacturingGarment factory in Tirupur with 50 workers = factory
Appropriate GovernmentCentral Government for central/large establishments; State Government for all othersTata Steel (Central) vs local shop (State)
DependantFamily members who depended on a deceased employee โ€” widow, minor children, parents, etc.If a mine worker dies, his widow + minor children = dependants

๐Ÿ”– Section 3: Registration and Cancellation of an Establishment

  • Every establishment covered by this Code must register electronically within the prescribed time.
  • If already registered under any other Central Labour Law, no re-registration is needed.
  • If a business is closing down (Chapter III or IV applies), the employer can apply for cancellation of registration.
๐Ÿ“ Example: Priya opens a new BPO company in Pune with 25 employees. She must register her establishment online under this Code within the time the Central Government prescribes. If she was already registered under the old Employees' Provident Funds Act, she does not need to register again โ€” the old registration counts.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ Chapter II โ€“ Social Security Organisations (Sections 4โ€“13)

This chapter creates the institutional framework โ€” the bodies that actually run social security schemes. Think of them as the management committees that handle workers' money and benefits.

๐Ÿ”– Section 4: Board of Trustees of Employees' Provident Fund (Central Board)

  • The Central Government creates the Central Board of Trustees (CBT) to manage EPF.
  • Composition: Chairperson + Vice-Chairperson (appointed by CG), up to 5 CG officials, up to 15 State reps, 10 employer reps, 10 employee reps, PF Commissioner (ex officio).
  • It is a body corporate โ€” can sue and be sued in its own name.
  • Can form an Executive Committee from its members for day-to-day work.
๐Ÿ“ Example: Think of the Central Board like the Board of Directors of a public company. It has employer reps (like company management), employee reps (like unions), and government reps โ€” all working together to manage provident fund money of crores of workers.

๐Ÿ”– Section 5: Employees' State Insurance Corporation (ESIC)

  • Central Government creates ESIC to manage health and cash benefits for workers.
  • Composition: Chairperson + Vice-Chairperson, 5 CG officials, State reps (1 per State), 1 UT rep, 10 employer reps, 10 employee reps, 2 medical profession reps, 3 MPs, Director General (ex officio).
  • Has a Standing Committee for day-to-day administration and a Medical Benefit Committee for health matters.
๐Ÿ“ Example: Meena is a factory worker in Chennai earning โ‚น18,000/month. She falls sick and needs hospitalisation. ESIC is the body that ensures she gets free medical treatment and also receives cash benefit (sickness benefit) during her absence from work.

๐Ÿ”– Section 6: National Social Security Board (NSSB) & State Boards

  • NSSB โ€” created by Central Government for unorganised workers. Chaired by Union Minister of Labour. 40 nominated members. Meets at least 3 times a year. Term: 3 years.
  • State Unorganised Workers' Boards โ€” every State must create one. Chaired by State Labour Minister. 31 nominated members. Meets at least once a quarter.
  • Functions: recommend schemes, advise government, monitor welfare schemes, review records, review expenditure.

๐Ÿ”– Section 7: State Building Workers' Welfare Boards

  • Each State Government must create a Building Workers' Welfare Board.
  • It provides: death/disability benefits, pension at 60, group insurance, education for children, medical expenses, maternity benefit, skill development, hostel facilities for construction workers.

๐Ÿ”– Section 8: Disqualification of Members

A person cannot be a member of any Social Security Organisation if they are:

  • Adjudicated insolvent (bankrupt)
  • Found lunatic or of unsound mind
  • Convicted of offence involving moral turpitude
  • An employer who has defaulted in payment of dues
  • A MP/MLA who becomes a Minister, Speaker, or Deputy Chairman of Rajya Sabha
OrganisationGovernsCreated ByKey Role
Central Board (CBT-EPF)Provident FundCentral GovtManages EPF, EPS, EDLI funds
ESICESICentral GovtProvides medical + cash benefits
NSSBUnorganised workersCentral GovtRecommends schemes, monitors welfare
State Unorganised Workers' BoardUnorganised workersState GovtState-level welfare for unorganised workers
Building Workers' Welfare BoardConstruction workersState GovtCess-funded benefits for BOCW workers

๐Ÿ’ฐ Chapter III โ€“ Employees' Provident Fund (Sections 14โ€“23)

EPF is a retirement savings scheme where both you and your employer put a fixed % of your salary every month into a fund. When you retire, change jobs, or face emergencies, you can withdraw this money.

๐Ÿ”– Section 15: Three Main Schemes

SchemePurposeWho Contributes
EPF Scheme (PF)Retirement savings fundEmployee 12% + Employer 3.67% of wages
EPS โ€“ Pension SchemeMonthly pension after retirement at 58Employer 8.33% (from their 12%)
EDLI โ€“ Insurance SchemeLife insurance cover for employeeEmployer contributes separately

๐Ÿ”– Section 17: Contribution in Respect of Employees and Contractors

  • Employer must pay their own share + deduct employee share from wages and deposit the total.
  • If work is given to a contractor, the principal employer remains responsible if the contractor defaults.
  • Contributions are priority debts โ€” even in employer insolvency, PF dues are paid first (Section 19).
๐Ÿ“ Example: Arun earns โ‚น20,000/month (basic + DA). His employer deducts โ‚น2,400 (12%) from Arun's salary and adds another โ‚น2,400 from his own pocket. So โ‚น4,800 goes into Arun's EPF account monthly. Out of the employer's โ‚น2,400, โ‚น1,666 goes to the Pension Scheme (EPS) and โ‚น734 goes to EPF.

๐Ÿ”– Section 16: Funds

Three separate funds are maintained:

  • Provident Fund โ€” accumulated savings (EPF)
  • Pension Fund โ€” for monthly pension (EPS)
  • Insurance Fund โ€” for life insurance (EDLI)

๐Ÿ”– Section 20: Exemptions

Chapter III does NOT apply to: co-operative societies with <50 workers, establishments set up under other Acts giving equal or better PF benefits, and certain notified establishments.

๐Ÿ”– Section 22: Transfer of Accounts

When an employee changes jobs, their PF account can be transferred to the new employer's account. This is done online through the EPFO portal using UAN (Universal Account Number).

๐Ÿ”– Section 23: Appeal to Tribunal

Disputes about EPF can be appealed to the Industrial Tribunal.

AspectDetail
Applies toEstablishments with 20 or more employees
Employee Contribution12% of wages (basic + DA)
Employer Contribution12% of wages (3.67% EPF + 8.33% EPS)
Interest on PFDeclared annually by Central Govt (typically 8.1โ€“8.5% p.a.)
WithdrawalOn retirement (58 yrs), resignation, death, marriage, housing, illness etc.
Tax BenefitContribution deductible under Sec 80C of Income Tax Act
Recognised underSection 18 โ€“ Fund recognised under Income Tax Act 1961

๐Ÿฅ Chapter IV โ€“ Employees' State Insurance (Sections 24โ€“52)

ESI is a self-financing social security and health insurance scheme for workers. Workers and employers both contribute a small % each month. In return, workers get free medical care and cash benefits during sickness, maternity, disability, etc.

๐Ÿ”– Section 25: ESI Fund

  • All contributions, penalties, grants, donations, etc. form the Employees' State Insurance Fund.
  • The Fund is managed by ESIC.

๐Ÿ”– Section 28: All Employees to be Insured

Every employee earning wages below the notified ceiling (currently โ‚น21,000/month) in covered establishments must be insured under ESI. They are called Insured Persons.

๐Ÿ”– Section 29: Contributions

Who PaysRateOn What
Employer3.25% of wagesMonthly wages of insured employees
Employee0.75% of wagesTheir own monthly wages
State Government12.5% of benefit expenditureMedical benefit costs (some States)
โญ Employees earning up to โ‚น176/day are EXEMPT from paying their own contribution. Employer still pays.

๐Ÿ”– Section 32: Benefits under ESI

BenefitWhat it CoversDuration
Sickness Benefit70% of wages during medically certified sickness91 days per year
Maternity BenefitFull wages during maternity leave26 weeks
Disablement Benefit90% of wages for work-related injuries/diseasesFor life if permanent
Dependants' BenefitMonthly payment to family after worker's death due to work injuryLifetime (widow/infirm child)
Medical BenefitFree OPD, IPD, specialist care, medicines, surgeriesAs required
Unemployment Allowance50% of wages if employee loses job involuntarilyUp to 2 years
Funeral ExpensesLump sum (โ‚น15,000) on death of insured personOne-time
๐Ÿ“ Example: Kavita works in a readymade garment factory earning โ‚น15,000/month. She has an accident at work and breaks her leg. She is hospitalised for 3 months. Under ESI: she gets free medical treatment at ESIC hospital + 90% of her daily wages (Temporary Disablement Benefit) during her inability to work. Her family members also get free medical treatment as ESIC dependants.

๐Ÿ”– Section 45: Scheme for Gig Workers and Platform Workers

  • The Central Government CAN extend ESI benefits to gig workers and platform workers through special schemes.
  • This is a landmark provision recognising the new digital economy workforce.
๐Ÿ“ Example: Rohit delivers food for a platform company. Under Section 45, the Central Government can frame a scheme to give Rohit ESI benefits even though he is not a traditional employee. The platform company (aggregator) would contribute to his social security.

๐Ÿ”– Section 48: Employees Insurance Court

Disputes about ESI โ€” whether an employee is insurable, rate of contribution, benefits etc. โ€” are decided by the Employees Insurance Court. Appeals from this court go to the High Court (Section 52).

๐ŸŽ Chapter V โ€“ Gratuity (Sections 53โ€“58)

Gratuity is a reward/gift from the employer for your long service. It's a lump sum amount paid to an employee when they leave the job (after 5 years), retire, or die/become disabled.

โญ Applies to establishments with 10 or more employees. Once applicable, always applicable even if workers fall below 10.

๐Ÿ”– Section 53: Payment of Gratuity

Gratuity is payable when an employee:

  • Completes 5 years of continuous service (for resignation/termination)
  • Retires on superannuation
  • Dies or becomes disabled (5-year rule waived)

๐Ÿ”– Section 54: Continuous Service

  • Continuous service = uninterrupted service including periods of illness, accident, leave, layoff, strike (not illegal), lock-out.
  • For seasonal workers: at least 75% of working days in a season counts as 1 year.

๐Ÿ”– Section 56: Formula for Gratuity Calculation

Gratuity = (Last Drawn Wages ร— 15/26) ร— Number of Years of Service

Where 15 = 15 days salary per year  |  26 = working days in a month

๐Ÿ“ Example: Mahesh works in a factory for 20 years. His last drawn wages = โ‚น30,000/month.
Gratuity = (30,000 ร— 15/26) ร— 20 = 17,307 ร— 20 = โ‚น3,46,154
Maximum gratuity payable = โ‚น20 Lakhs (capped under the Code).

๐Ÿ”– Section 55: Nomination

  • Every employee must nominate a person to receive gratuity in case of death.
  • Nomination must be given within 30 days of completing 1 year of service.
  • A married employee MUST nominate family members only.

๐Ÿ”– Section 57: Compulsory Insurance

Every employer (except Central/State Govt, local authority, and those with approved gratuity fund) must obtain insurance for their gratuity liability from LIC or an approved insurer.

AspectRule
Minimum service required5 years (except death/disability)
Rate15 days wages per completed year
Maximum limitโ‚น20,00,000 (โ‚น20 Lakhs)
Time to payWithin 30 days of becoming payable
Interest on delaySimple interest @ prescribed rate after 30 days
Tax exemptionUp to โ‚น20 Lakhs exempt from income tax
ForfeiturePossible if dismissed for disorderly conduct, moral turpitude

๐Ÿคฑ Chapter VI โ€“ Maternity Benefit (Sections 59โ€“72)

This chapter protects working women during pregnancy and after childbirth. It ensures they can take paid leave and are not discriminated against at work because of pregnancy.

โญ Applies to establishments with 10 or more employees. Women must have worked for at least 80 days in the last 12 months to claim benefits.

๐Ÿ”– Section 59: Prohibition on Work

  • No employer can allow a woman to work during the 6 weeks immediately following delivery or miscarriage.
  • Women should not be given heavy or strenuous work during pregnancy if medically advised.

๐Ÿ”– Section 60: Right to Maternity Benefit

  • Normal delivery: 26 weeks paid leave (first 2 children); 12 weeks for 3rd child onwards.
  • Adoption (child below 3 months): 12 weeks leave.
  • Commissioning mother (surrogate): 12 weeks leave.
โญ 8 weeks of the 26-week maternity leave must be taken BEFORE the expected delivery date.

๐Ÿ”– Section 64: Medical Bonus

If the employer does not provide free pre-natal and post-natal medical care, they must pay a medical bonus of โ‚น3,500 (or higher as notified) to the woman.

๐Ÿ”– Section 65: Leave for Miscarriage

  • In case of miscarriage or medical termination of pregnancy: 6 weeks paid leave from the day of miscarriage.

๐Ÿ”– Section 66: Nursing Breaks

Women with children below 15 months are entitled to two nursing breaks per day (in addition to normal rest intervals) until the child reaches 15 months of age.

๐Ÿ”– Section 67: Crรจche Facility

  • Establishments with 50 or more employees must provide crรจche (daycare) facility either within the premises or at a prescribed distance.
  • Mothers are permitted to visit the crรจche 4 times a day (including nursing breaks).
๐Ÿ“ Example: Sunita works in a software company and is pregnant for the first time. She can take 26 weeks of fully paid maternity leave โ€” 8 weeks before delivery and 18 weeks after. Her employer cannot fire her for being pregnant (Section 68). The company with 50 employees must also provide a crรจche for her baby after she returns to work.

๐Ÿ”– Section 68: No Dismissal for Pregnancy

An employer CANNOT dismiss, discharge, or give notice of dismissal to a woman who is absent due to maternity. Any such dismissal is VOID.

BenefitDuration/Amount
Maternity Leave (1st & 2nd child)26 weeks (8 weeks pre-delivery)
Maternity Leave (3rd child onwards)12 weeks
Adoption leave12 weeks
Miscarriage leave6 weeks
Medical Bonusโ‚น3,500 (if no free medical care)
Nursing Breaks2 breaks/day till child is 15 months
Crรจche facilityRequired for 50+ employee establishments
Work ban post-delivery6 weeks

โš–๏ธ Chapter VII โ€“ Employees' Compensation (Sections 73โ€“99)

This chapter deals with compensation for workplace accidents and occupational diseases. If a worker is injured or dies at work, this chapter ensures the employer pays them or their family.

โญ Applies to workers listed in the Second Schedule โ€” mainly manual/hazardous workers in factories, mines, plantations, construction, transport, etc. (NOT covered by ESIC).

๐Ÿ”– Section 73: Reports of Fatal Accidents

If a worker dies or suffers a serious body injury at work, the employer MUST send a report to the Competent Authority within the prescribed time.

๐Ÿ”– Section 74: Employer's Liability for Compensation

An employer MUST pay compensation if an employee suffers:

  • Death resulting from a work injury
  • Permanent total disablement from a work injury
  • Permanent partial disablement from a work injury
  • Temporary disablement lasting more than 3 days
  • Occupational disease specified in the Third Schedule

Employer is NOT liable if: the employee was under the influence of drugs/alcohol, the employee wilfully disobeyed safety rules, or the worker's own wilful act caused the injury.

๐Ÿ”– Section 76: Amount of Compensation

Type of InjuryFormulaExample (wages โ‚น10,000/month)
Death50% of monthly wages ร— Relevant Factor (age-based)50% ร— 10,000 ร— 213.57 (age 25) = โ‚น10,67,850
Permanent Total Disablement60% of monthly wages ร— Relevant Factor60% ร— 10,000 ร— 213.57 = โ‚น12,81,420
Permanent Partial Disablement% of earning capacity lost ร— PTD amountIf 40% loss: 40% of โ‚น12,81,420 = โ‚น5,12,568
Temporary Disablement25% of monthly wages per half-monthโ‚น2,500 per 15 days, max 5 years
โญ Minimum compensation: Death = โ‚น1,20,000. Permanent Total Disablement = โ‚น1,40,000.

๐Ÿ”– Section 77: Payment When Due

  • Compensation must be paid within 30 days of it becoming due. Delay attracts interest up to 12% per annum + damages up to 50% of the compensation amount.

๐Ÿ”– Section 36: Occupational Diseases

Workers contracting diseases listed in the Third Schedule (like silicosis for miners, lead poisoning for battery workers, byssinosis for textile workers) while in the relevant employment are entitled to compensation as if it were a work injury.

๐Ÿ“ Example: Rajan drives a truck for a transport company. He meets with an accident while delivering goods and loses one leg permanently. Under Section 74 & 76, the transport company MUST pay him compensation for Permanent Partial Disablement. Rajan's doctor certifies 40% loss of earning capacity โ†’ employer pays 40% of the PTD compensation amount.
AspectRule
Who can claimEmployees in Second Schedule + occupational disease workers
Time to pay after order30 days (delay = interest + penalty)
Claim to be filedWithin 2 years of accident / 2 years of diagnosis
ForumCompetent Authority (Commissioner for Workmen's Comp)
AppealTo High Court (Section 99)
Medical examinationEmployer can require (Section 84)

๐Ÿ—๏ธ Chapter VIII โ€“ Building & Other Construction Workers (Sections 100โ€“108)

Construction workers are among India's most vulnerable workers. This chapter creates a cess (special tax) funded welfare system for them โ€” from the very builders whose projects they build!

๐Ÿ”– Section 100: Levy and Collection of Cess

  • Every person who carries out building/construction work must pay a Cess (welfare tax).
  • Rate: Between 1% and 2% of the cost of construction (as notified by State Government).
  • Collected by the State Government and paid to the Building Workers' Welfare Fund.
โญ Construction work below 10 workers in past 12 months OR for personal residential use costing under โ‚น50 lakhs is EXEMPT from cess.

๐Ÿ”– Section 103: Self-Assessment of Cess

The person carrying out construction work must self-assess and pay the cess before receiving occupancy certificate from local authority. This is a smart compliance mechanism.

๐Ÿ“ Example: A real estate company builds a โ‚น50-crore apartment complex using 200 construction workers. At 1% cess, they must deposit โ‚น50 lakhs to the Building Workers' Welfare Fund. This money is used to pay pension, insurance, education grants, medical expenses, and maternity benefits to those workers.

๐Ÿ”– Section 106: Registration of Building Workers as Beneficiaries

  • Construction workers must register with the Building Workers' Welfare Board to access benefits.
  • A worker who has completed 90 days of construction work in the last 12 months is eligible to register.

๐Ÿ”– Section 108: Building Workers' Welfare Fund & Applications

The Fund is used for: pension, death benefit, disability, group insurance, children's education, medical treatment, maternity benefit, skill development, and transit/hostel accommodation.

ItemDetail
Cess Rate1%โ€“2% of construction cost
Exemption<10 workers OR residential <โ‚น50 lakhs personal use
Registration eligibility90 days work in last 12 months, age 18โ€“60
BenefitsPension, death/disability, education, medical, maternity, housing, insurance
Interest on delayed cess2% per month (Section 101)
Cessation as beneficiaryOn reaching 60 years OR not working in construction for 5 years

๐Ÿ‘ท Chapter IX โ€“ Social Security for Unorganised, Gig & Platform Workers (Sections 109โ€“114)

Over 90% of India's workforce is in the unorganised sector โ€” domestic workers, construction workers, street vendors, farmers, auto drivers, home-based workers, etc. This chapter is a landmark step to extend social security to them.

๐Ÿ”– Section 109: Framing Schemes for Unorganised Workers

  • Central Government CAN frame schemes for: life and disability cover, health and maternity, old age protection, and education.
  • State Governments CAN frame their own schemes for unorganised workers.
  • Existing schemes can be continued or new ones can be created.
๐Ÿ“ Example: PM-SYM (Pradhan Mantri Shram Yogi Maan-Dhan) is a scheme for unorganised workers โ€” a domestic worker or street vendor can contribute โ‚น55โ€“200/month (age-based) and get โ‚น3,000 pension per month after age 60. This is the kind of scheme Section 109 enables.

๐Ÿ”– Section 111: Record Keeping

  • The Central Government shall maintain a database of unorganised workers โ€” their Aadhaar, employment details, skills, etc.
  • State Governments must maintain and update such records.

๐Ÿ”– Section 112: Helpline and Facilitation Centres

The Central/State Government must set up helplines and facilitation centres for unorganised workers, gig workers, and platform workers to help them register, access schemes, and resolve issues.

๐Ÿ”– Section 113: Registration of Workers

  • Every unorganised worker, gig worker, and platform worker CAN register on a digital portal using Aadhaar (or Aadhaar-based identity).
  • A Unique Registration Number will be assigned for tracking benefits.
โญ This is a critical section โ€” it aims to create a universal worker registry for targeted social security delivery.

๐Ÿ”– Section 114: Schemes for Gig Workers & Platform Workers

  • The Central Government SHALL frame social security schemes specifically for gig workers and platform workers.
  • Funding: from the aggregator company (like Swiggy, Zomato, Ola, Uber), the gig/platform worker, and/or the Central/State Government.
๐Ÿ“ Example: Pradeep works as a cab driver for a ride-hailing platform. Under Section 114, the Central Government can create a scheme where: the platform company contributes 1โ€“2% of Pradeep's earnings, Pradeep contributes a small amount, and the government tops it up. This fund provides him health cover, accident insurance, and retirement savings.
CategoryDefinitionExample
Unorganised WorkerWorker in enterprise with <10 employees โ€” home-based, self-employed, or wage workerDomestic maid, street vendor, farm labourer
Gig WorkerPerson earning from work outside traditional employmentFreelancer, delivery agent (contracted, not employed)
Platform WorkerPerson providing services via an online platform for paymentOla driver, Urban Company electrician, Swiggy delivery person

๐Ÿ’น Chapter X โ€“ Finance and Accounts (Sections 115โ€“121)

This chapter deals with financial management of all social security organisations โ€” how they maintain accounts, get audited, prepare budgets, and write off losses.

๐Ÿ”– Section 115: Accounts

Every Social Security Organisation must maintain proper accounts and financial statements in the prescribed manner. Separate accounts for each fund (EPF, EPS, EDLI, ESI Fund, Building Fund, etc.).

๐Ÿ”– Section 116: Audit

  • Accounts are audited by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG).
  • The audit report is laid before Parliament/State Legislature.

๐Ÿ”– Section 117: Budget Estimates

Every Social Security Organisation prepares an annual budget of income and expenditure in the prescribed form and gets it approved by the Central/State Government.

๐Ÿ”– Section 118: Annual Report

Every Social Security Organisation submits an Annual Report of its activities to the Central/State Government. The Government lays this report before Parliament/State Legislature.

๐Ÿ“ Example: EPFO submits its annual report to Parliament showing: how many crore members are enrolled, how much PF was collected, how many claims were settled, investment returns earned on the PF corpus, etc. This ensures public accountability.

๐Ÿ”– Section 119: Valuation of Assets and Liabilities

An actuarial valuation (professional assessment) of the assets and liabilities of the Pension Fund and ESIC Fund must be done periodically to ensure long-term sustainability.

๐Ÿ”– Section 121: Writing Off of Losses

The Central Board (EPF) and Corporation (ESIC) can, with government approval, write off unrecoverable losses or amounts โ€” for example, contributions from employers who have closed down.

SectionSubjectKey Requirement
115AccountsPrescribed format, separate fund accounts
116AuditCAG audit, report to Parliament
117BudgetAnnual budget, Govt approval
118Annual ReportTabled in Parliament/Legislature
119Actuarial ValuationPeriodic assessment of fund sustainability
120PropertySS Organisation can hold property in prescribed manner
121Write-offUnrecoverable amounts can be written off with Govt approval

๐Ÿ” Chapter XI โ€“ Authorities, Assessment, Compliance & Recovery (Sections 122โ€“132)

This chapter deals with the enforcement machinery โ€” the officials who check whether employers are following the Code, and the powers to recover dues when employers default.

๐Ÿ”– Section 122: Inspector-cum-Facilitator

  • The government appoints Inspector-cum-Facilitators (IcF) to inspect establishments AND help/guide employers in compliance.
  • Powers: Enter any establishment, inspect records/registers/notices, examine persons, take copies of documents, call for information, seize evidence.
  • Must give a Web-based Inspection Schedule โ€” inspections are randomised, computerised to reduce corruption.
โญ The "cum-Facilitator" part means the officer should also HELP the employer comply โ€” not just punish. This reflects the new philosophy of facilitative compliance under India's labour reforms.

๐Ÿ”– Section 123: Maintenance of Records

Every employer must maintain prescribed registers, records, and send returns electronically. Workers must be given pay slips and employment letters.

๐Ÿ”– Section 124: Employer Not to Reduce Wages

An employer CANNOT reduce wages or benefits already given to workers just because this Code now prescribes a standard. The Code sets a FLOOR, not a ceiling.

๐Ÿ”– Section 125: Assessment of Dues

  • If an employer hasn't paid contributions, the Authorised Officer can assess the amount due by looking at wages, the number of employees, and the relevant period.
  • Employer gets a show cause notice first and a personal hearing opportunity.

๐Ÿ”– Section 127: Interest on Dues

Interest is charged at 12% per annum on overdue contributions under Chapter III and Chapter IV.

๐Ÿ”– Section 129: Recovery of Amount Due

Unpaid contributions can be recovered like tax arrears โ€” by attaching and selling property, by attachment of bank accounts, by appointment of a receiver, etc. A Recovery Officer has sweeping powers.

SectionSubjectKey Point
122Inspector-cum-FacilitatorDual role: inspect + help employers comply
123Records & ReturnsDigital records, e-returns required
124No wage reductionCannot reduce existing benefits
125Assessment of duesSCN + hearing before assessment
127Interest12% per annum on overdue contributions
128DamagesUp to 100% of dues as penalty for default
129RecoveryLike tax recovery โ€” property attachment
130Recovery CertificateIssued by Authorised Officer, valid even after amendment
131Other modesCan recover through courts, district collectors

โš ๏ธ Chapter XII โ€“ Offences and Penalties (Sections 133โ€“138)

This chapter specifies criminal punishments for employers who violate the Code โ€” especially for not paying contributions, deducting money from workers but not depositing it, and other violations.

๐Ÿ”– Section 133: Penalty for Failure to Pay Contributions

OffencePunishment
Deducting employee's contribution but NOT depositing itImprisonment 1โ€“3 years + Fine
Failure to pay employer's contributionImprisonment up to 3 months + Fine up to โ‚น1 lakh (first time)
Other contraventions (obstruction, false statements, etc.)Fine up to โ‚น1 lakh or imprisonment up to 6 months or both
โญ The most serious offence under this Code is deducting PF/ESI from workers' wages but pocketing the money instead of depositing it โ€” this attracts 1โ€“3 years of mandatory imprisonment.

๐Ÿ”– Section 134: Enhanced Punishment for Repeat Offenders

If an employer is convicted again for the same offence within 5 years, the punishment is doubled โ€” minimum 2 years imprisonment in serious cases.

๐Ÿ”– Section 135: Offences by Companies

  • When a company commits an offence, the persons responsible โ€” Directors, Managers, Company Secretary โ€” are personally liable to punishment unless they prove the offence occurred without their knowledge or they took all due diligence to prevent it.
๐Ÿ“ Example: XYZ Pvt Ltd deducts EPF from 500 employees' salaries every month but doesn't deposit it with EPFO for 6 months. The Managing Director is personally liable for 1โ€“3 years imprisonment PLUS the company must pay the outstanding amount with interest and damages.

๐Ÿ”– Section 136: Cognizance of Offences

Courts can take cognizance of offences under this Code only on a complaint filed by the authorised officer of the social security organisation (EPFO/ESIC). No police FIR is needed.

๐Ÿ”– Section 137: Prior Opportunity before Prosecution

Before prosecuting an employer, the Social Security Organisation must give them a written notice and an opportunity to comply/pay. This prevents automatic criminalisation.

๐Ÿ”– Section 138: Compounding of Offences

  • Most offences can be compounded (settled by paying a sum) before or after trial.
  • Compounding does not apply to repeat offenders or serious cases of deducting wages and not depositing contributions.

๐Ÿ“‹ Chapter XIII โ€“ Employment Information and Monitoring (Sections 139โ€“140)

This brief but important chapter deals with vacancy reporting โ€” requiring employers to report job openings to Career Centres (formerly Employment Exchanges) to help match job seekers with jobs.

๐Ÿ”– Section 139: Reporting of Vacancies to Career Centres

  • Every establishment must report vacancies to the nearest Career Centre (employment exchange or digital portal) in the prescribed manner before filling the vacancy.
  • Career Centres can provide candidates matching the employer's requirements.
  • However, employers are NOT obligated to hire from the Career Centre โ€” they can hire from any source.
๐Ÿ“ Example: A bank has 50 vacancies for clerks. Under Section 139, it must notify these vacancies to the Career Centre (NCS portal โ€” National Career Service portal). Job seekers registered on the portal will be notified. The bank can still hire from campus placement or any other source, but it must report the vacancy first.

๐Ÿ”– Section 140: Exclusions

This chapter does NOT apply to:

  • Establishments employing less than the prescribed number of employees
  • Establishments belonging to the Central or State Governments (which have their own recruitment systems like UPSC/SSC/State PSCs)
  • Agriculture-based establishments
  • Such other class of establishments as the Central Government may notify
AspectDetail
Vacancy reportingMandatory before filling any vacancy
PlatformNCS Portal (National Career Service) or prescribed Career Centre
Obligation to hireNo โ€” employer can hire from anywhere but must report
ExemptedGovt establishments, agricultural establishments, below-threshold
PurposeEmployment data collection + help unemployed workers find jobs

๐Ÿ“ฆ Chapter XIV โ€“ Miscellaneous (Sections 141โ€“164)

This chapter contains various general provisions including the Social Security Fund, use of Aadhaar, power to exempt establishments, repeals, and transitional provisions.

๐Ÿ”– Section 141: Social Security Fund

  • The Central Government shall establish a Social Security Fund.
  • This fund receives: unclaimed deposits from PF/ESI, fines, grants, etc.
  • Used for social security of gig workers, platform workers, and unorganised workers.

๐Ÿ”– Section 142: Application of Aadhaar

  • Aadhaar number is used for identification and to determine eligibility for benefits.
  • Social Security Organisations can use Aadhaar-based authentication.
  • No person shall be denied benefits just because they lack Aadhaar โ€” alternative authentication can be used.

๐Ÿ”– Section 143: Power to Exempt Establishments

The Central/State Government can exempt certain establishments from the provisions of any Chapter if the establishment provides equal or better benefits to its workers through other arrangements.

๐Ÿ“ Example: A big company like Infosys may have its own provident fund trust that gives better returns than EPFO. Under Section 143, they can get an exemption from Chapter III and manage their own fund โ€” provided they meet or exceed the Code's requirements.

๐Ÿ”– Section 145: Liability on Transfer of Establishment

If an establishment is transferred (sold, leased, gifted), the new owner inherits all unpaid social security liabilities of the previous owner. Buyers beware!

๐Ÿ”– Section 148: Misuse of Benefits

If anyone obtains benefits through false claims or misrepresentation, the Social Security Organisation can recover the amount plus impose penalties.

๐Ÿ”– Section 151: Protection Against Attachment

Social security benefits (PF, ESI, gratuity) are protected from attachment by courts for recovery of debts โ€” these are meant exclusively for the worker and cannot be seized by creditors.

๐Ÿ”– Section 161: Effect of Laws and Agreements

No agreement or contract can reduce workers' rights below what this Code provides. Any such agreement is void to that extent.

๐Ÿ”– Section 164: Repeal and Savings

This Code repeals 9 old laws and replaces them:

Old Law RepealedReplaced by Chapter in This Code
Employees' Provident Fund & MP Act, 1952Chapter III (EPF)
Employees' State Insurance Act, 1948Chapter IV (ESI)
Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972Chapter V (Gratuity)
Maternity Benefit Act, 1961Chapter VI (Maternity)
Employees' Compensation Act, 1923Chapter VII (EC)
Building & Other Construction Workers Act, 1996Chapter VIII (BOCW)
Unorganised Workers' Social Security Act, 2008Chapter IX
Employment Exchanges (CN) Act, 1959Chapter XIII
BOCW Cess Act, 1996Chapter VIII (Cess)
โญ This Code consolidates 9 separate laws into ONE single code โ€” the biggest labour law reform in India since Independence in terms of consolidation!

๐Ÿ“Š Flowchart โ€“ How Social Security Works Under the Code

This flowchart shows the complete lifecycle of social security โ€” from an establishment starting, to workers getting benefits, to disputes being resolved.

๐Ÿญ Establishment Starts (Factory / Shop / Mine / Plantation) ๐Ÿ“‹ Register Online (Section 3) Electronic registration with Govt Portal Meets Threshold? (10/20 workers?) YES NO Monitor Growth & Re-assess ๐Ÿ’ฐ Pay Contributions Monthly EPF (12%+12%) | ESI (3.25%+0.75%) | BOCW Cess (1-2%) ๐Ÿ›๏ธ EPFO Manages PF Fund | Pension Fund | Insurance ๐Ÿฅ ESIC Manages Health | Cash Benefits | ESI Fund โœ… Worker Gets EPF Benefits Retirement savings โ€ข Pension Life insurance โ€ข Transfer on job change โœ… Worker Gets ESI Benefits Free medical โ€ข Sickness pay Maternity โ€ข Disability โ€ข Funeral โž• Additional Benefits (Other Chapters) Gratuity (5 yrs) | Maternity (26 wks) | Workers' Compensation | BOCW Welfare Employer Defaults? YES NO Smooth Compliance โœ… โšก Inspector Issues SCN (Show Cause Notice) Assessment of dues + Interest (12% p.a.) + Damages โš–๏ธ Recovery + Prosecution (Ch XI & XII) Property Attachment | Bank Seizure | Imprisonment 1โ€“3 yrs ๐Ÿ›๏ธ Appeals: Tribunal โ†’ High Court Industrial Tribunal (EPF) | EI Court (ESI) | Competent Authority (EC)

๐Ÿง  Mind Map โ€“ The Code on Social Security, 2020

An interactive visual overview of all branches of the Code.

๐Ÿ—บ๏ธ Roadmap โ€“ The Code on Social Security, 2020

The complete journey of the Code โ€” from the old laws to the new consolidated framework and future implementation milestones.

๐Ÿ“œ Pre-2020: 9 Separate Laws

EPF Act 1952, ESI Act 1948, Gratuity Act 1972, Maternity Act 1961, EC Act 1923, BOCW Act 1996, Unorganised Workers SS Act 2008, Employment Exchanges Act 1959, BOCW Cess Act 1996 โ€” all operating separately, causing confusion and compliance burden.

๐Ÿ›๏ธ 2nd Labour Commission Recommendations

The National Commission on Labour (2002) recommended consolidating all labour laws into 4 codes for simplicity and uniformity. This set the seed for the Code on Social Security.

๐Ÿ“ 2019: Bill Introduced in Parliament

The Code on Social Security Bill, 2019 was introduced in Lok Sabha. Wide consultations with stakeholders โ€” employers, trade unions, states โ€” were conducted before finalising.

โœ… September 28, 2020: Presidential Assent

The Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) received Presidential Assent on 28th September 2020. It consolidates 9 laws into ONE unified Code โ€” the biggest social security reform in India's history.

๐Ÿ”ง May 3, 2021: Section 142 Notified

Section 142 (Aadhaar-based authentication for social security) came into force from 3rd May 2021 โ€” the first provision to be operationalised under the new Code.

๐Ÿ“‹ Drafting of Rules (2021โ€“2023)

Central government, state governments, and social security organisations began drafting implementation rules, regulations, and schemes โ€” a massive exercise involving EPF, ESI, gratuity, maternity, and unorganised sector schemes.

๐Ÿš€ November 21, 2025: Major Notification

Sections 1โ€“141, 143โ€“163 notified โ€” the bulk of the Code formally came into force. This was the landmark step bringing the entire framework into operation (as updated in the document "as on 21st November 2025").

๐ŸŒ Gig/Platform Worker Schemes (Ongoing)

Section 114 requires the Central Government to frame specific social security schemes for gig workers and platform workers. These schemes are being developed in consultation with aggregator companies (Ola, Uber, Swiggy, Zomato, Urban Company, etc.).

๐Ÿ“ฑ Universal Worker Registry

Section 113 mandates an Aadhaar-linked digital registry for all unorganised, gig, and platform workers. Building this comprehensive database is ongoing โ€” NDUW (National Database of Unorganised Workers) is being developed and expanded.

๐Ÿ”ฎ Future: Full Implementation

Complete implementation goals: (1) All 9 old Acts fully replaced. (2) All 500 million+ workers in India โ€” organised and unorganised โ€” covered under some form of social security. (3) One portal for all social security claims and registrations. (4) International Social Security Agreements with other countries (Section 159).

Chapter I: Foundation

Preliminary provisions, definitions, registration โ€” the building blocks of the entire Code.

Chapter II: Institutions

EPFO, ESIC, NSSB, State Boards, Building Workers' Boards โ€” the bodies that run everything.

Chapters IIIโ€“IV: Core Benefits (Organised Sector)

EPF for retirement savings + ESIC for health and cash benefits โ€” covering workers in establishments with 10/20+ employees.

Chapters Vโ€“VII: Worker Protection

Gratuity for long service reward + Maternity Benefit for women workers + Workers' Compensation for injury/death at work.

Chapter VIII: Construction Workers

Cess-funded welfare for 50+ million construction workers โ€” India's largest vulnerable workforce.

Chapter IX: Unorganised + Gig + Platform

The most forward-looking chapter โ€” extends social security to 430+ million unorganised workers and the growing gig economy.

Chapters Xโ€“XII: Financial Backbone

Finance, accounts, audit, compliance machinery, recovery powers, and penalties โ€” ensuring the system is funded and enforceable.

Chapters XIIIโ€“XIV: Completing the Picture

Employment information, Social Security Fund, Aadhaar integration, repeal of old laws, and saving provisions โ€” completing India's new social security architecture.

โš ๏ธ This resource is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. | The Code on Social Security, 2020 (Act No. 36 of 2020) | Compiled for LL.B Students
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