Employers are eyeing the Rs125 billion left out of the amount of Rs200 billion to pay the wages of the formal workers. They are also asking the government to utilise the funds of the various social protection windows and to suspend employers’ contributions during the pandemic. There is little chance that they will avail the concessional credit line offered by the State Bank to avoid laying off workers. The Sindh government’s attempt to legally force the employers to keep their workforce employed is unlikely to succeed without federal cooperation. Instead of working through the employers, the Federal government should access the workers through the Employees Old Age Benefit Institution (EOBI), Workers Welfare Fund (WWF) and the respective Employees Social Security Institutions of the provinces.
Working with these institutions during the pandemic will have the advantage of generating useful learning for moving eventually towards the time-tested system of universal social protection through a single agency with just two tasks — unemployment benefits and pensions. The health of the workers is better left with the public health system, itself seizing on new opportunities. Chapter 2 of the Constitution provides the “Principles of Policy” for the establishment of the Riyasat-e-Madina. Meanwhile, Article 38 on the “Promotion of social and economic well-being of the people” bears repeating, especially these subsections: “(b) provide for all citizens, within the available resources of the country, facilities for work and adequate livelihood with reasonable rest and leisure; (c) provide for all persons employed in the service of Pakistan or otherwise, social security by compulsory social insurance or other means; (d) provide basic necessities of life, such as food, clothing, housing, education and medical relief, for all such citizens, irrespective of sex, caste, creed or race, as are permanently or temporarily unable to earn their livelihood on account of infirmity, sickness or unemployment.”
The disregard of these constitutional provisions has been facilitated by unconscionably ignoring Article 29(3) requiring the President every year to “cause to be prepared and laid before the [parliament] a report on the observance and implementation of the Principles of Policy”. The last such report was presented in the year 2015-16. Its shoddy contents displayed an utter disrespect to the welfare messages of the Principles. Will the President, please, rise to the occasion?
Published in The Express Tribune, May 1st, 2020.
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