Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
France is planning to toughen unemployment rules by restricting the period when jobless citizens receive welfare payments, Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said on Wednesday. President Emmanuel Macron ...
The French government is planning to shorten the period people can claim unemployment benefits in order to strengthen incentives to work, Prime Minister Gabriel Attal said in an interview ...
France's unemployment rate decreased to its lowest level in a decade this summer, at 8.5%, but still remains among the highest in the European Union. Here is a look at the main labor market ...
A court decision in 2004 reinstated some benefits and called into question the financial plan of the scheme. In 2007 the Court of Appeal (Cour de Cassation) struck down the lower courts decision. The current accord was signed in February 2009 and sets out the following conditions for receiving unemployment benefits.
It was created just after the Liberation, by an order of 4 October 1945, followed by other texts. Gradually, protection has covered the entire population, while the benefits extend. When creating Social Security, France imitated more the Bismarckian system (insurance for workers) than the Beveridge one (widespread solidarity). Over the years ...
In France, the Inspection du travail is the body responsible for checking whether the provisions of the Labour Code or collective agreements are correctly applied in companies. The labor inspectors primarily control whether companies apply the Labor Code on all points : employment contracts , illegal work , working hours, etc.
The agency focuses on people notably affected by long-term unemployment, young people, seniors, and RSA-beneficiaries (state funded welfare). France Travail collects workers' contributions to finance unemployment benefits, paid by salaries. However, the government of François Fillon said this mission would be entrusted to the URSSAF.
Assédic's main mission was to manage an unemployment insurance system. It collected insurance contributions paid by both employers and employees. [3] There were 30 local Assédic in France, [4] with more than 600 offices, [5] which now belong to Pôle emploi.