Sunday, January 25, 2026

Supreme Court to examine obligatory benefits for domestic workers

The Supreme Court (SCJN) will examine a proposal next week that would make it mandatory to pay social security benefits to domestic workers.

Justice Alberto Pérez Dayán has recommended that the second chamber of the court rule against an article in the federal Social Security Law that states that paying benefits to housekeepers is voluntary.

The law as it stands has resulted in most domestic workers not receiving benefits that other employees are legally entitled to.

Pérez’s proposal argues that there is no constitutional justification to exclude the mostly female workers, commonly known as muchachas or maids, from the social security system.

“[It’s not just] a discriminatory action that perpetuates and reinforces the social marginalization of women who work in homes but also a violation [of their rights] that cannot be overcome simply because said workers can access the voluntary regime,” the proposal states.

The initiative recommends that the government and the Mexican Social Security Institute (IMSS) introduce a pilot program over a period of 18 months that is easy for employers to implement and that Congress make the necessary legislative reforms to ensure that domestic workers’ right to access benefits is enshrined in the law.

The newspaper Reforma said today that it is unclear if a majority of judges will support the proposal because some have shown that they are not inclined to support court rulings that include recommendations or suggestions to other authorities.

The December 5 session will be the last time the second chamber of the SCJN sits in 2018, meaning that if the proposal is rejected, an examination of an amended version would not happen before the middle of January.

According to a 2016 employment poll conducted by the National Statistics Agency, 95% of domestic workers are women and only 4% of those workers are employed under the terms of a contract in which their rights and obligations are clearly stated.

Source: Reforma (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.
A man looks out over Mexico City from a public transport gondola

Mexico’s week in review: Prisoner handover deepens US security ties while trade tensions threaten USMCA

0
Mexico navigated a tense week with its northern neighbors, as Canada's comments at Davos revealed cracks in the USCMA partnership and Mexico-US security collaboration continues to deepen.
Ryan Wedding in custody

Former Olympic snowboarder, wanted in US for trafficking, arrested in Mexico

5
Canadian Ryan Wedding lived a “colorful and flashy” lifestyle in Mexico for 10 years, while allegedly running a major cocaine trafficking business and sitting on the FBI's Ten Most Wanted list.
Mexican President Sheinbaum and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney

Opinion: Mexico could lose out as Canada risks USMCA with bet on ‘new world order’

12
As Canada pushes back against the U.S., Mexico has the most to lose, writes Logan Gardner.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity