All states in India have enacted the Shop and Establishment Act, which regulates most businesses in India. The Act aims to govern the payment of wages, the number of hours worked, leave, holidays, and other work conditions for those employed in retail and commercial establishments. We examine the primary components of the Shop and Establishment Act in this blog.
The Indian Shop and Establishment Act
The Shop and Establishment Act governs locations where any trade, business, or profession operates. The Department of Labor oversees it. In addition to commercial establishments, the act also covers societies, charitable trusts, printing facilities, for-profit educational institutions, and locations where banking, insurance, stock, or share brokerage. The working hours, employee rest breaks, opening and closing times, closed days, national and religious holidays, overtime work, guidelines for hiring children, annual leave, maternity leave, sick leave, and other types of leave are all governed by this act.
Shop & Establishment Act-Regulated Locations
In India, the state may vary how the Shop and Establishment Act works from one state to the next. The Shop & Establishments Act of each state, however, is what covers all stores and other commercial establishments there, according to the Act. Shops can be an office, a storeroom, a warehouse, or a location where customers receive service or where products are for sale, whether retail or wholesale. “Establishments” refers to stores, businesses, lodging facilities, dining establishments, theaters, and other public entertainment venues. According to the act, establishments may also include other establishments defined in an official notification in the gazette. The Factories Act of 1948 regulates factories exempt from the Shops & Establishments Act’s coverage.
The Shop and Establishment Act’s Regulations
The Shop and Establishment Act oversees various facets of operating a shop or other commercial establishments. The Shop and Establishment Act regulates several significant domains, such as
- Working hours.
- Rest and mealtime breaks
- The prohibition of hiring children.
- Employment of women or young people
- Hours of operation and closing
- Days Off
- Weekly Off
- Paid vacation days
- Time and circumstances surrounding wage payments
- Payroll deductions
- Leave procedures
- Dismissal
- Cleanliness
- Luminous and fresh air
- Protection from fire measures
- Accidents
- Record keeping
Retail and Establishment Act Permit
Any shop or other commercial establishment that opens for business must apply a Shop and Establishment Act License to the Chief Inspector within the required timeframe. The license application must contain the name of the employer, the establishment’s address, its name, its classification, the number of employees, and any other relevant details. Upon applying, the Chief Inspector will review it, and the occupier will receive a registration certificate. The act requires that registration certificates be continuously renewed and prominently displayed at stores and other commercial establishments.
Within 15 days of closing, an occupier of a store or other establishment must give the Chief Inspector written notice of the closure. The Chief Inspector can cancel the shop or business establishment’s registration upon receipt of the closure request.