The Asian Age

Macron puts cap on labour court payouts

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Paris, Aug. 31: The French government said on Thursday it would cap unfair dismissal payouts and give companies more flexibilit­y to adapt pay and working hours to market conditions in a labour reform France’s biggest union said was disappoint­ing.

The reform, President Emmanuel Macron’s first major policy step since his election in May, is also the first big test of his plans to reform the euro zone’s second-biggest economy.

For decades government­s of the left and right have tried to reform France’s strict labour rules, but have always diluted them in the face of street protests.

The government said in a document presenting the reform that it will make it possible to adapt work time, remunerati­on and workplace mobility to market conditions based on agreements­reached by simplified majority between employers and workers.

Workers compensati­on for dismissal judged in a labour court to be unfair would be set at three months of wages for twoyears in the company with the amount rising progressiv­ely depending on The reforms are ambitious, balanced and fair. They would help France make up for lost years of high unemployme­nt. Edouard Philippe, how long a worker was with the firm, unions said. However, normal severance pay would be increased from 20 per cent of wages for each year in a company to 25 percent, Liberation reported.

The government consulted with unions for weeks, and only the hardline CGT union, the country’s second biggest, said from the start that it would hold a protest, set for September.

 ??  ?? Emmanuel Macron
Emmanuel Macron

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