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Title: | Vol. 4 No.2: UNDUE EQUATION OF ‘SAVINGS’ WITH ‘COMPENSATION FOR SERVICES’: CASE COMMENT |
Authors: | Mekuria, Belachew |
Keywords: | UNDUE EQUATION.‘SAVINGS’, ‘COMPENSATION FOR SERVICES,COMMENT |
Issue Date: | Mar-2010 |
Abstract: | Individual employer-employee relations are regulated by a regime called
‘employment law’. Despite the inadequate semantic clarity in our legal system
regarding the usage of the words ‘employment law’ and ‘labour law’, the latter
is ‘understood as the regime that governs workers’ efforts to advance their own
shared interests through self-organisation and collective protest, pressure,
negotiation and agreement with employers.’1 Among the numerous benefits
accorded to an outgoing employee is severance payment that somehow provides
an interim income during transition from one engagement to another. And this
form of benefit represents one variety of the ‘third wing’ within the regime of
labour relations that are legislatively determined ‘minimum labour conditions’.
These are conditions which are subject to neither individual nor collective
negotiations to their detriment. While we moved on from an indiscriminate
entitlement regime to a selective approach towards who may (or may not) get
this form of benefit, the exact contours of application still remain contested.
This comment addresses a trend that is currently being entrenched in the
practice of the labour benches whereby they deny severance pay in case a
discharged employee is a beneficiary of a scheme known as ‘provident fund’ or
vise versa. This of course has been legislated upon by the labour (amendment)
proclamation and is being practiced by our courts. This comment is a critical
appraisal of that practice based on the dictum of the Federal Supreme Court on
the matter. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2875 |
Appears in Collections: | Mizan Law Review
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