From: Portside labor [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Sunday, January 20, 2013 5:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Unions Back Revisions Of Labor Law In France

 


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 <http://www.portside.org/2013-01-20/unions-back-revisions-labor-law-france> 
Unions Back Revisions Of Labor Law In France 


 

Liz Alderman
January 11, 2013
The New York Times 
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/12/business/global/france-near-deal-to-simplify-labor-regulations.html>
 

 

PARIS — French labor unions and business leaders struck a deal to overhaul 
labor codes. The changes include more flexibility for employers to reduce hours 
to prevent lay offs in times of "economic distress." Employers will pay a 
higher tax for using temporary labor. In exchange for flexibility, unions 
secured improvements to unemployment benefits and health insurance, as well as 
seats on the board of large companies.

 


 

  
<http://www.portside.org/sites/default/files/field/image/France%20Labor%20Law%20Reforms.jpg>
 

Last month, striking steelworkers blocked entry to an ArcelorMittal plant in 
Basse-Indre, France., David Vincent/Associated Press 
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2013/01/12/business/12labor-pic/12labor-pic-articleLarge.jpg>
 , 

 


 

PARIS — French labor unions and business leaders struck a deal on Friday to 
overhaul swaths of  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/france/index.html?inline=nyt-geo>
 France’s notoriously rigid labor market, moving to tame some of the most 
confounding rules in the 3,200-page labor code as the country tries to increase 
its competitiveness and curb unemployment.

The changes would include giving employers more flexibility to reduce working 
hours in times of economic distress without incurring union strikes. High 
levels of compensation that courts can award to laid-off workers would be 
trimmed. The five-year period that former employees now have to contest layoffs 
would be reduced, a shift that Medef, France’s employers’ union, said would 
“reduce the fear of hiring” by businesses.

President  
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/h/francois_hollande/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
 François Hollande has said the changes are needed to burnish France’s 
international allure as a place to do business, and the accord capped weeks of 
sparring among the five top labor unions and Medef.

The labor measures would help address what Louis Gallois, Mr. Hollande’s 
investment commissioner, has called a “two-speed” labor market in France. Under 
that system, employees on long-term contracts enjoy extensive, costly job 
protections and benefits, while temporary workers, whose ranks have surged to a 
third of the French labor force, have minimal job security and relatively few 
benefits.

In November, the government introduced a tax credit for companies, potentially 
worth a total of 20 billion euros ($26 billion), aimed at easing high 
employment costs. In exchange, business negotiators agreed on Friday, as a 
concession to unions, to pay higher taxes for short-term work contracts. Two 
hard-line unions, the Confédération générale du travail and the Force Ouvrière, 
rejected the offer as insufficient and refused to sign the deal, which was 
nonetheless binding because France’s three other main labor unions backed it. A 
formal agreement will be signed next week.

The tax would help expand government coffers meant to support the unemployed 
while also nudging employers toward favoring long-term contracts. Employers 
would also pay somewhat higher contributions for private health insurance.

The deal “will change life for businesses in France,” Laurence Parisot, the 
president of Medef, said in a statement. “This marks the advent of a culture of 
compromise after decades of a philosophy of social antagonism.”

The negotiations were clouded recently by a series of public episodes, 
including a government threat to nationalize an ArcelorMittal plant in France 
to preserve jobs. There was also the decision in the last week by the French 
actor Gérard Depardieu to take Russian citizenship to escape a proposed 75 
percent marginal tax rate on incomes of more than 1 million euros ($1.3 
million).

Whether any of the changes will come fast enough to fix France’s problems is an 
open question. Some economists say that France could become the next sick 
nation of Europe if it does not improve the environment for investment and 
hiring.

“Given the gap we still have between the level of labor market regulation in 
France and in countries like the United States, Britain and Ireland, it is very 
clear that when observers look at the outcome, they will say it’s a step in the 
right direction, but not enough,” said Dominique Barbet, the European economist 
for BNP Paribas in Paris.

“But we also need to keep in mind that in France, if you want to make reforms, 
you have to go through small steps first,” he said. “You can’t try to change 
the system overnight. That usually results in mass protests in the streets.”

Mr. Hollande’s government is expected to sign off on the deal. He has said it 
will help him keep a promise of reducing unemployment, now at a 13-year high of 
10.7 percent, by the end of the year. Youth unemployment is about 25 percent. 
By contrast, unemployment in Germany, which last decade made deeper cuts to 
labor costs and regulations than France is doing, is at 6.9 percent and 
joblessness among the young is around 8 percent.

Mr. Hollande sought the accord after Mr. Gallois issued a  
<http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/20/business/global/challenging-france-to-do-business-differently.html?ref=lizalderman>
 stark assessment of the French economy in November, saying the country needed 
a “competitiveness shock” that would require politicians to curb the “cult of 
regulation” that Mr. Gallois said was choking business.

Under current labor rules, many entrepreneurs in France hesitate to hire large 
numbers of workers. Some employers even resort to operating several companies 
with no more than 49 employees each instead of running larger ones that employ 
hundreds. That is because after the 50th employee is hired, a stack of new 
regulations come into play, including long firing procedures even for 
underperforming employees and requirements for numerous union representatives.

Temporary contracts fall on the other end of the scale: they are often lower 
paid and offer far fewer protections, something that has alarmed French labor 
unions. More than 80 percent of new contracts issued in France are short term, 
a trend that has grown steadily as employers turn to them to escape the costly 
rules protecting permanent workers.

Mr. Gallois’s report said that unless France relaxed its labor rules, the 
country would continue on an industrial decline that destroyed more than 
750,000 jobs in a decade and helped shrink France’s share of exports to the 
European Union to 9.3 percent from 12.7 percent. The report also called for 
cuts to business taxes used to pay for government and France’s costly social 
safety net.

While it will take time for any changes to take effect, France has already 
taken steps that could help it skirt the worst in coming years. A fiscal 
consolidation begun in 2010 is continuing, in which tax increases and spending 
cuts are being applied to bring the overall budget deficit down to 3 percent of 
gross domestic product in 2013, from an estimated 4.5 percent in 2012.

“What’s most important is that France get an economic recovery,” said Mr. 
Barbet, of BNP Paribas. “If we don’t have that, people won’t hire no matter 
what the new labor rules are.”

 

 

 


 


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