THE PLIGHT OF WOMEN HOMEBASED WORKERS
UNDER INDONESIAN LABOUR LAW
(Editor’s Note: This is an abridged version of a longer paper
by Ratno Cahyadi Sembodo and Hesti R. Wijaya)
Introduction
For more than 15 years, efforts to protect home-based
workers officially have been done in Indonesia but to no success. This
has led Homenet Indonesia to analyze the existing labor laws since homeworkers
are invisible yet in reality they are there. They actually have working
relations with their employers and receive some pay in return. They
should therefore be recognized by law and obtain their rights as workers.
The 1996 ILO Convention on Homeworkers defines a homeworker
as someone who works for remuneration in his or her home or in other
premises of his or her own choice, other than the workplace of the employer,
resulting in a product or service as specified by the employer, irrespective
of who provides the equipment, materials or other input used. Are homeworkers
protected under the latest Indonesian labor law (Law No. 13/2003)? This
article explores this issue by describing the characteristics of homeworkers
in Indonesia, analyzing their predicament under the current labor law,
and making certain conclusions at the end .
Characteristics of homeworkers
Homeworkers show specific characteristics remarkably
diffe-rent from workers in a manufacturing establishment which belongs
to the factory owner.
In Indonesia, there are three types of homebased worker
: 1) homeworkers in the putting out system (POS) who work in their homes,
this work being obtained from the employers or, in most cases, immediate
employers or intermediaries; 2) homeworkers who act as middle persons,
employ other homeworkers and employ themselves in similar type of work;
and 3) homeworkers who are self employed and work independently in producing
goods according to their own designs, having full rights on their production
and marketing their products themselves.
All three types of homebased workers have the following
experiences/characteristics in common: 1) long working hours; 2) low
returns, lower than minimum regional wage; 3) work often involving family
laborers; 4) no social security; 5) no occupational health and safety
devices; 6) no written contract; and 7) use of their home as their base
of production.
There are additional similarities between homeworkers
in the POS and homeworkers who are middle persons at the same time.
Their work is irregular, orders are from one to seven days, and wages
are paid through piece rate decided upon by the immediate employer or
intermediary, and upon delivery of products which are considered satisfactory
by the latter. Despite long working hours, they have no overtime pay.
Their contributions to the production process consist of their labor,
their work place, and their equipment. Workers lack or do not have any
bargaining power. There are no provisions regarding working hours, overtime,
weekly rest period, maternity, menstruation, and annual leaves.
In contrast, the self-employed have relatively regular
work, have daily orders, and can decide on their own compensation and
work standards, working hours and rest periods, holidays and leaves.
They get paid upon selling their products, have contributions to the
entire production process, and bear the risks when there are losses.
Protection of homebased workers
within the Indonesian law for workers
Taking the above mentioned charac-teristics in consideration,
the pattern of working relations between homebased workers and their
immediate employers is specific. Its features are distinct from employer-employee
relations in the industrial sector or formally registered companies,
in the following sense:
These characteristics cannot easily be fitted in the
new Indonesian labor law. The main question is whether their current
patterns of working relations are covered by existing law, thereby ensuring
that their rights to be protected as workers are met , or whether such
patterns fall outside the existing labor law.
At glance, reading the definition only, it seems that
the latest Indonesian law (Law No. 13/2003) regarding manpower covers
the homeworkers. Chapter 3, bullet 3 reads :“A worker or a laborer
is a person who work and receiving a wage or a return in other forms”
Chapter I, No. 4 also provides that “Work provider is an individual
or entrepreneur, corporate body or other type of institution that employ
worker and pay by wage or other form of return.” These definitions
are consistent with the homeworkers’ intention to work for a pay.
Definitions of what is an entrepreneur and what is an
enterprise found in Chapter I, Number 5, and Chapter 6, Number 6 of
Law No. 13/2003 should cover not only the employers, but also the middle
persons employing women homeworkers, registered and/or non-registered
as long as they employ other people in the production process.
In addition, these definitions are also consistent with
other laws, such as Chapter 1, Number 6 and 7, Law No. 2/2004 regarding
Industrial Relation Dispute-Solution, which is the same as Chapter 1,
number 7 and 8, Law No. 21/2000 regarding Labor Union/Workers Union,
as well as Chapter 1, Number 3 and 4 Law No. 3/1992 regarding Workers’
Social Security.
It implies that entrepreneurs/emplo-yers who employ home-workers
are included in the abovementioned definit-ion, because it applies to
both type of employers,
However, entrepreneurs are usually not transparent about
the fact that they employ homeworkers. This is possible since the production
process is not done in the factory establishment, but in the house of
the homeworkers.
In the mean time, the working contract supposedly is covered by Chapter
1, Number 14 of Law No. 13/2003 that states : “Working Contract
is an agreement between workers/laborers with employer or work provider
that covers work conditions, rights and responsibilities of all parties.”
(Chapter 1, no. 14). This definition is broader than the coverage of
labor laws in the past. In particular, it explicitly states that a working
contract is not only applied to laborers/workers with employer, but
also to workers/laborers with work provider who, in the case of POS,
is the middle person. The main difference between the two lies in enterprise
ownership. Entrepreneurs may own the enterprises, while the work providers
are not necessarily enterprise owners.
Unfortunately, it seems this chapter is nullified by
chapter 1, no. 15, Law 13/2003 which reads :“Working relation
is relation between entrepreneurs and the workers/laborers, based on
working contract that spells out items of work, wage and order.”
Legal experts such as Soepomo (1985) and Djumialdji (2002)
however believe that a working agreement exists when a worker/laborer
has agreed to work for employers who provide jobs and pay upon job per-formance.
It is not necessarily a written contract since chapter 51, verse 1,
of Law 13/2003 reads : “Work agreement may be a written agreement
or a verbal agreement”
The elements of work agreements are : 1) Job implementation,
meaning that the worker agrees to perform job designs; and 2) Subordinate
relationship, meaning that workers or laborers work under the leadership
or instruction of others.
Another feature that characterized home-work relation
is that the work is very much short term, and replicable continuously..
Particular reference to this is in chapter 1601c, verse 2 KUHPA (Book
of Rule of Civil Law a) which states :“When a work-contract-agreement
is followed with other agreement in which there is with a time gap in
between or if during the time of the drafting work-contract-agreement
both parties clearly meant to materialize further a number of agreements,
such that all work-contract-agreement all together is considered as
one work agreement, thus, the one that applies is stipulation regarding
all of those agreements similarly applied to each agreement. However
if in that case the first agreement is put forth as an experiment, this
agreement is considered to remain intact as a work contract agreement.”
It is clear that such relation may be categorized as
work relation, because it involves leadership element or authority to
instruct by employers to workers such as homeworkers.
The Issue of Wage Payment
and Social Security
Law No. 13/2003 mentions the following definition of
wage or pay. “Wage is the workers/laborers rights in the form
of many as return from employers or work provider to the workers/laborers
which is determined and paid according to a work agreement, join agreement,
or rules of laws, including bonus for workers/laborers and their families
upon a job and/or tendered service.” This definition identifies
the work provider as the party who is capable of paying the workers/laborers,
thereby implying that the case of homeworkers
who are actually the workers/laborers in the putting out
system (POS) are covered and should be protected under Indonesian labor
laws.
In addition, as a result of advocacy by Homenet Indonesia
and other groups, the Ministry of Manpower covered homebased workers
by issuing the following regulation on piece rate :“for the laborers
with contract system on piece rated payment, for over and above a month,
the minimum monthly wage should be equivalent to the minimum wage rate
at the said company” (Minister of Labor Regulation No. Per. 01/MEN/1999)
Chapter 15, verse 1.
Although the term homeworkers is not specifically mentioned,
this verse means a lot to them. Consequently, other rights as workers
should be applied to the home laborers including social security. This
has been seriously undertaken with the promulgation of implementing
regulation No. Kep.150/Men/1999, a Decision Letter of the Manpower Minister
regarding operation of Social Security Program for Daily Paid Workers,
and contract laborers and certain time agreement.
Homenet Indonesia will work based on these rules, as
these are not nullified by Workers Law No. 13/2003. As for the self-employed
workers, they are supposed to be covered by social security using Law
No. 3/1992, regarding Workers Social Security, wherein Chapter 3 verse
2 says: “Every worker has rights to obtain worker social rights.”
The mechanism for implementation is organized by and under the responsibility
of PT Jamsostek (Workers’ Social Security Limited Enterprise).
However, it is not readily available to them because in the same law,
Chapter 4, verse 2 states : “Workers Social Security Program for
workers who do work outside working relations will be regulated further
under a Govern-ment Regulation.”
So far, there has not been any regulation as such stipulated
by the Government. For Home-net Indonesia this is also an area for continued
advocacy work.
Conclusion
Although technically, homeworkers are not specifically
mentioned by the laws, Homenet Indonesia claims that these laws can
be interpreted to cover the workers or laborers in the putting out system.
However, a lot still has to be done, particularly in advocacy work among
various stake holders to make social protection in general, and social
security in particular, a reality for the homeworkers.
Important also is the question of : “Who is the
employer?” as in most cases, the employer is invisible to the
homeworkers and can easily deny any responsibility to them.
For the self-employed workers, the advocacy should be
directed at the drafting and stipulation of a social security program
for workers outside the working relations defined in Law No. 3/
1992, chapter 4, verse 2. In the meantime, to fill the gap, indigenous
social protection schemes should be promoted.