Repo Dosen ULM

INDONESIA’S MINIMUM WAGE POLICY AFTER THE OMNIBUS LAW: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS FROM ISLAMIC PRINCIPLES

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.author BUANA, MIRZA SATRIA
dc.date.accessioned 2022-09-28T03:20:51Z
dc.date.available 2022-09-28T03:20:51Z
dc.date.issued 2022-07-21
dc.identifier.uri https://repo-dosen.ulm.ac.id//handle/123456789/25652
dc.description.abstract The labour sector and industrial relations are pivotal for Indonesia’s development, especially in the current neo-capitalist setting. Therefore, this article examined the current Indonesian labour law and its industrial relations through a comparative analysis with Islamic principles, particularly after revision with the 2020 Omnibus Law. Using a socio-legal methodology, it analysed the historical and political contexts of the Acts on labour to determine their tendency to enhance pr undermine labourers’ rights. Moreover, this article explored the government’s utilisation of the Acts for suppression and compared the ways of Islamic principles’ regulation of justice in industrial affairs, especially in the minimum wage policy. The Study revealed that the 2003 Manpower Law, the 2020 Omnibus Law on Work Creation, and the 2021 Regulation on Wages, which claimed to protect labourer’ rights, erode them instead. The labour laws are firms in stressing workers’ duties and obligations, yet are indecisive in regulating their rights, leading to the reduction and abolishment of several work benefits. In addition, government authorities are weak and accommodate to the interests of companies and investors. Therefore, this article concluded that the labour law provision, specifically the legal issue of minimum wage policy, does not correspond to Islamic principles and the practices of maslahah and maqosid al-shari’ah. Keywords: (Rep. of) Indonesia, wage policy, industrial relations, labour laws, Islamic principles. en_US
dc.publisher Universitas Lambung Mangkurat en_US
dc.subject Research Subject Categories::LAW/JURISPRUDENCE en_US
dc.title INDONESIA’S MINIMUM WAGE POLICY AFTER THE OMNIBUS LAW: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS FROM ISLAMIC PRINCIPLES en_US
dc.type Article en_US


Files in this item

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record

Search DSpace


Browse

My Account