The Code on Social Security 2020: A Structural Reset of India’ Welfare Framework

Rahul KaushikNationalFebruary 27, 2026

The Code on Social Security 2020
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New Delhi, February 27, 2026: The landscape of Indian labor law is undergoing its most significant transformation since independence. At the heart of this shift is The Code on Social Security (SS Code) 2020, a landmark legislation that recently moved from the statute books to active implementation on November 21, 2025. By subsuming nine fragmented central labor laws into a single, cohesive framework, the Code is designed to act as a structural reset, transitioning India from a system of selective protection to one of universal social security.

From Fragmentation to Integration

For decades, India’s social security net was a patchwork of colonial-era laws. Workers in the “organized” sector enjoyed benefits under the EPF Act (1952) or the ESI Act (1948), while nearly 90% of India’s workforce—the “unorganized” sector—remained largely invisible to the law.

The 2020 Code eliminates this dichotomy by merging the following key acts:

  • The Employees’ Provident Fund Act, 1952
  • The Employees’ State Insurance Act, 1948
  • The Maternity Benefit Act, 1961
  • The Payment of Gratuity Act, 1972
  • The Unorganised Workers’ Social Security Act, 2008 (and four others).

By creating a single definition for “wages” and a unified registration system, the Code reduces the compliance nightmare for businesses while ensuring that benefits are not lost in administrative silos.

The Digital Frontier: Recognizing the Gig Economy

Perhaps the most revolutionary aspect of the SS Code is the formal legal recognition of Gig Workers and Platform Workers. In the age of Blinkit, Zomato, and Uber, millions of Indians earn their livelihood outside the traditional “master-servant” relationship.

  • Legal Standing: For the first time, the law defines “aggregators” and mandates their participation in social security.
  • Funding the Safety Net: The Code proposes a Social Security Fund financed through a contribution from aggregators (1%–2% of their annual turnover, capped at 5% of the amount paid to workers).
  • Universal Portability: Through the e-Shram portal and Aadhaar-linked Universal Account Numbers (UAN), a delivery partner in Delhi can carry their accumulated benefits even if they move to a different platform or city.

Empowering the Fixed-Term Workforce

The Code introduces a major win for the modern “contractual” workforce through Fixed-Term Employment (FTE). Previously, an employee had to complete five years of continuous service to be eligible for gratuity. The new Code slashes this requirement for FTEs:

  • Pro-rata Gratuity: Workers on fixed-term contracts are now eligible for gratuity after just one year of service.
  • Parity in Benefits: FTEs are entitled to the same hours of work, wages, and social security benefits as permanent employees, discouraging the practice of “perpetual contracting” to save costs.

Enhancing Ease of Doing Business

While the Code expands worker rights, it also streamlines the regulatory burden for employers:

  • Inspector-cum-Facilitator: The traditional “Inspector Raj” is replaced by a web-based, randomized inspection system where officials act as facilitators, providing advice on compliance before resorting to punitive measures.
  • Limitation Periods: A new five-year limitation period has been introduced for initiating inquiries into provident fund dues, providing “temporal certainty” to businesses and preventing harassment over decades-old records.
  • Decriminalization: Many minor procedural lapses have been de-clogged from the criminal justice system. The Code allows for “compounding” of offenses, where fines can be paid instead of facing imprisonment for technical violations.

The Road Ahead: Challenges in 2026

As of early 2026, the structural reset is in its “calibration phase.” While the Central Government has notified the primary provisions, the full impact depends on the State Rules, which are currently being finalized.

The success of the Code hinges on two pillars: registration and funding. With over 30 crore workers already on the e-Shram portal, the challenge now lies in converting that digital visibility into tangible benefits—health insurance, maternity support, and old-age pensions—for the man and woman at the last mile of the Indian economy.

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