Kuwait Times

Dutch classrooms empty again as primary teachers strike

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AMSTERDAM: Elementary schools stayed closed across the Netherland­s yesterday, as thousands of teachers went on strike for the second time in two months to demand higher pay and better working conditions. The previous one-day strike was in October, when eleventh-hour funding promises by the government failed to avert the largest work stoppage by Dutch primary school teachers since the 1980s. Prime Minister Mark Rutte offered them 700 million euros ($825 million) in extra funds over the next four years, but they say they need double that to cover salary increases and pay for classroom assistants. Participat­ion in yesterday’s stoppage among the Netherland­s’ 100,000 primary teachers appeared to be high, with unions estimating around 90 percent of schools remained shut. The strike reflects growing frustratio­n across the Dutch workforce, with employees in many sectors feeling left behind by strong economic growth that has not been matched by wage increases.

Primary school teachers have demanded a one-time 1.4 billion euro cash injection to bring their salaries up to the level of their counterpar­ts in secondary schools, who on average earn 20 percent more. For many teachers the confrontat­ion with the state is also about a serious labor shortage that has increased their workload. The Netherland­s will have a shortfall of 11,000 primary school teachers by 2027, estimates by the Ministry of Education showed last month, while a pay gap with other profession­s is expected to grow. —Reuters

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