Dear Professional Colleagues,
An employee lost the first phalanx of his index finger during the course of employment. His salary is Rs. 27,000, and he has been working for the past 5 months. How should we calculate the employee's compensation?
Regards, Michael Nicholas
From India, Chennai
An employee lost the first phalanx of his index finger during the course of employment. His salary is Rs. 27,000, and he has been working for the past 5 months. How should we calculate the employee's compensation?
Regards, Michael Nicholas
From India, Chennai
Loss of Earning Capacity for the First Phalanx of the Index Finger
The loss of earning capacity for the loss of the first phalanx of the index finger is specified as 9% in Schedule 1 of the EC Act 1923. This is subject to the fact that the injury has not affected the due discharge of his function in the organization.
Calculating Compensation for the Injury
To calculate the compensation for such an injury, first calculate the amount equal to sixty percent of the monthly wages of the injured employee (subject to a ceiling of Rs. 15,000) multiplied by the relevant factor (Say A). The "relevant factor," in relation to an employee, means the factor specified in the second column of Schedule IV against the completed years of the age of the employee on his last birthday immediately preceding the date on which the compensation fell due. Then multiply A by the loss of earning capacity.
For instance, for a 45-year-old injured person, the compensation would be (Rs. 15,000 X 60/100) X 169.44 X 9% = Rs 1,37,424.60.
From India, Mumbai
The loss of earning capacity for the loss of the first phalanx of the index finger is specified as 9% in Schedule 1 of the EC Act 1923. This is subject to the fact that the injury has not affected the due discharge of his function in the organization.
Calculating Compensation for the Injury
To calculate the compensation for such an injury, first calculate the amount equal to sixty percent of the monthly wages of the injured employee (subject to a ceiling of Rs. 15,000) multiplied by the relevant factor (Say A). The "relevant factor," in relation to an employee, means the factor specified in the second column of Schedule IV against the completed years of the age of the employee on his last birthday immediately preceding the date on which the compensation fell due. Then multiply A by the loss of earning capacity.
For instance, for a 45-year-old injured person, the compensation would be (Rs. 15,000 X 60/100) X 169.44 X 9% = Rs 1,37,424.60.
From India, Mumbai
CiteHR is an AI-augmented HR knowledge and collaboration platform, enabling HR professionals to solve real-world challenges, validate decisions, and stay ahead through collective intelligence and machine-enhanced guidance. Join Our Platform.