As Punjab marks International Labor Day on May 1, nearly 14 million workers across the province have far more to celebrate than a symbolic public holiday. Under the Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif, Punjab has embarked upon one of its most ambitious and comprehensive labor reform agendas in decades, one that boldly redefines labor welfare not as charity, but as the very cornerstone of inclusive economic development.
The most transformative intervention has been on wages. The Punjab government first established a minimum wage of Rs. 37,000 per month across all districts, subsequently raising it to Rs. 40,000 for skilled, semi-skilled and large-enterprise categories under the Labor and Human Resource Department. Crucially, a digital complaints portal and grievance helpline were launched to enforce compliance, because a wage guarantee without accountability is merely a promise on paper.
Under the ILO’s Decent Work Agenda, minimum wage is not simply a salary benchmark; it is a social contract between labor and capital. Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz has ensured Punjab joins the global “living wage” movement advancing across Vietnam, Brazil and Indonesia, while introducing digital labor-violation reporting systems comparable to those in South Korea and Malaysia.
Legislative reform has been equally sweeping. The Punjab Occupational Safety and Health Rules, 2024 provide the province’s first comprehensive workplace safety framework, placing statutory responsibility on employers across sewerage lines, construction sites and factories. This brings Punjab in line with ILO Convention C155 on occupational safety. The Punjab Restriction on Employment of Children Rules, 2024, strengthen penalties for child labor, while the landmark Punjab Labor Code consolidates over 26 fragmented laws into a unified legal framework, formally extending protection to agricultural, domestic and construction workers who have long been excluded from the system’s reach.
Housing, historically neglected in labor policy, has become a defining priority under CM Maryam Nawaz Sharif’s government. In a landmark decision, 1,220 free residential flats were allotted through transparent balloting at Labor Complexes in Sundar, Kasur and Taxila. The chief minister subsequently approved 3,000 additional housing units, signaling not a one-off gesture but a sustained institutional commitment to dignified living. Under the Punjab Workers Welfare Fund, 750 additional flats were opened with reserved quotas for widows and disabled workers. Two worker hostels accommodating 704 women were approved in Garment City, Sheikhupura, a progressive step mirroring best practices from Bangladesh’s export-oriented garment sector.
Financially, the government allocated Rs.6 billion to clear long-overdue death and marriage grants for over 29,000 workers, restoring not just benefits but institutional trust. A transformative Rs.84 billion ration card program for 1.25 million working families has been introduced, issuing digital cards through a bank that provides monthly food subsidies and access to 13 financial services, including salary advances and cash transfers. This extends labor welfare beyond wages into household economic security, a hallmark of socially progressive governance.
Healthcare has seen some of the boldest investments in Punjab’s labor history. New 50-bed social security hospitals were inaugurated in Kasur and Sargodha, with a foundation laid in Rahim Yar Khan. A 200-bed Cardiac City for workers in Lahore’s Defence Road has been announced. The Punjab Employees Social Security Institution (PESSI), reconstituted and equipped with a Rs.36 billion surplus budget for FY 2024-25, of which Rs.18.63 billion is earmarked for hospitals and dispensaries, has begun offering advanced tertiary care. Nawaz Sharif Social Security Hospital performed its first spinal neurosurgery on a registered worker, while Faisalabad’s facility completed brain and spine procedures. Twenty-seven new ambulances and province-wide telemedicine infrastructure further extend this safety net to remote workers.
Globally, labor reform fails not from weak laws but from weak enforcement. CM Maryam Nawaz Sharif has addressed this directly, ensuring that inspectorates, digital compliance systems and dedicated enforcement mechanisms accompany every major reform. This governance discipline distinguishes Punjab’s agenda from performative policy-making.
On Labor Day 2026, Punjab’s labor framework stands as more than democratic symbolism. It represents a practical, funded and enforceable model of pro-worker governance, driven by a leader who has placed the dignity of millions at the center of public policy. With sustained political will, Chief Minister Maryam Nawaz Sharif is writing a new chapter in Punjab’s social contract, one where every worker’s right to a fair wage, safe workplace, healthy life and secure home is not an aspiration, but a guarantee.
The writer is a Lahore-based public policy analyst and can be reached at [email protected]
