Industrial Disputes Act, Sections 4 and 5

In the hierarchy of the Industrial Disputes Act, Sections 4 and 5 represent the “Diplomatic Tier.” The goal here is to prevent a “cold war” (a dispute) from turning into a “hot war” (a strike or lockout) through third-party intervention.

​Here is the breakdown of these sections, followed by an analysis of why this “friendly” approach often fails in practice.

​Section 4: Conciliation Officers

​This section gives the “Appropriate Government” (Central or State) the power to appoint Conciliation Officers.

  • Appointment: The government may, by notification in the Official Gazette, appoint such number of persons as it thinks fit to be Conciliation Officers.
  • Jurisdiction: They can be appointed for a specified area, for specified industries in a specified area, or for one or more specified industries either permanently or for a limited period.
  • The Objective: Their primary duty (under Section 12) is to mediate and promote the settlement of industrial disputes. They act as a bridge between the employer and the workmen.
  • Status: They are considered “Public Servants” within the meaning of Section 21 of the Indian Penal Code.

​Section 5: Boards of Conciliation

​While a Conciliation Officer is usually a single individual (often an official from the Labor Department), a Board of Conciliation is an ad-hoc, tripartite body created for a specific dispute.

  • Constitution: The government may “as occasion arises” constitute a Board.
  • Structure:
    • A Chairman: Must be an “independent person.”
    • Members: Two or four other members appointed in equal numbers to represent the parties to the dispute (the employer and the workmen).
  • Appointment Process: The representatives are appointed on the recommendation of the respective parties. If a party fails to make a recommendation within the prescribed time, the Government appoints persons it deems fit to represent that party.
  • Quorum: The Board can function even if the Chairman or a member is absent, provided the Government is notified and the vacancy is filled (though proceedings are generally stayed if the Chairman’s position is vacant).

​Intellectual Sparring: The “Toothless Tiger” Critique

​Sections 4 and 5 sound excellent on paper—a neutral ground for dialogue. However, as your sparring partner, I’ll challenge the effectiveness of this machinery with three points:

​1. The Power Vacuum

​A Conciliation Officer is not an adjudicator. They cannot pass an “order” or a “judgment.” They can only “persuade.” If one party (usually the employer) decides to be stubborn, the Conciliation Officer can do nothing except write a “Failure Report” (F.I.R. of labor law). Does a system that relies entirely on “goodwill” actually work in a high-stakes capitalist environment?

​2. The Board of Conciliation is a “Ghost” Provision

​In reality, Boards of Conciliation (Section 5) are almost never constituted. Governments find it much faster to let a single Officer handle it or refer the matter directly to a Labor Court. Why keep Section 5 in the Act if it has become a dead letter in modern industrial practice?

​3. Conflict of Interest

​The Conciliation Officer is a government employee. Often, the “Appropriate Government” is also the employer (in Public Sector Undertakings). Can a government employee truly be a neutral mediator when the dispute is against the very government that signs their paycheck?

​Comparison Table: Officer vs. Board

Conciliation Officer (Sec 4)Board of Conciliation (Sec 5)
CompositionSingle individual (Govt official)Tripartite (Chairman + Reps)
PermanencyUsually permanent/standingAd-hoc (as occasion arises)
PowerPurely facilitativeInvestigative and recommendatory
CommonalityVery common; the first stepExtremely rare in practice

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