1 / 25

Labour Market – experiences of the Slovak Republic

Labour Market – experiences of the Slovak Republic. National Convention on the EU in Serbia Mária Nádaždyová, EPPP Belgrade 16 March 2009. 2009 – year of anniversaries. 5 years since the accession to the EU 20 years since the fall of Iron Curtain

hammer
Download Presentation

Labour Market – experiences of the Slovak Republic

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Labour Market – experiences of the Slovak Republic National Convention on the EU in Serbia Mária Nádaždyová, EPPP Belgrade16 March 2009

  2. 2009 –year of anniversaries 5 years since the accession to the EU 20 years since the fall of Iron Curtain • EU membership: wide support and consensus across the whole social and political spectrum • Positive economic and social achievements of last years disrupted by the global economic crisis • SK-EU development: strongly interlinked, full integration

  3. SK labour market development

  4. Labour market (LM) performance compared to selected MS 2000 -2007

  5. LM performance compared to selected MS2000 -2007

  6. LM performance compared to selected MS2000 -2007

  7. SK: development of registered unemployment rate2005-2008

  8. Lisbon Strategy (LS) - growth and jobs • Mid-term review in 2005: Integrated guidelines for growth and jobs (broad guidelines for the economic policies of the MS and the Community and Guidelines for the employment policies of the MS. • MS invited to take the integrated guidelines for growth and jobs into account in their national reform programmes (NRPs). • 4 pillars of the renewed LS – 4 priority areas: • R&D and innovation • business environment • employment opportunities • integrated energy/infrastructure policy.

  9. Development of selected indicators for monitoring of the Lisbon Strategy

  10. Development of selected indicators for monitoring of the Lisbon Strategy

  11. Development of selected indicators for monitoring of the Lisbon Strategy

  12. Development of selected indicators for monitoring of the Lisbon Strategy

  13. SK success story (National Reform Programme 2008) „High economic growth, a stable economic environment, employment growth, unemployment decline in theprevious years and a gradual consolidation of the public finance have created the preconditions for furthergrowthof the Slovak economy and increased standards of living in the country.“

  14. Sources of GDP growth(INEKO survey among local economists, March 2007)

  15. Labour Code • Basic features of 2003 reform More flexibility: Less coercive character – setting only basic standards, Weaker trade unions • Basic features of the 2007 amendments Better protection: improved terms and conditions for decent work, part-time contracts employees protection, protection of dependent work,reduction of gender pay gap.

  16. Employment Services Actextensive amendments– May 2008 • ALMP measures reinforced and extended • Measures better focused on disadvantaged groups aiming at increasing their employability • Support of LM integration of disadvantaged groups e.g. school graduates, disabled, mothers, pre-retirement age • Measures to address long-term unemployment e.g. allowances for training disadvantaged job seekers, to keep employment of low-income groups, allowances for LM education and training for graduates, transportation to work allowance, support for self-employment jobs and social enterprises.

  17. European Economic Recovery Plan • In the context of the current economic downturn, the European Council in 2008 agreed on a European Economic Recovery Plan (EERP) • This plan provides for a co-ordinated budgetary stimulus to boost demand and restore confidence. • It should be accompanied by an acceleration of structural reforms, grounded in the LS, to stimulate the economy whilst boosting the Union's long-term growth potential, notably by promoting the transition towards a low-carbon, knowledge-intensive economy. • It also presents proposals to stimulateEU labour markets, notably through the implementation of integrated flexicurity policies focussed on activation measures, and skills. • These are essential in promoting employability and ensuring rapid re-integration into the labour market.

  18. Implementation of the LS reforms in the context of the EERP – SK assessment by EC • Slovak GDP growth moderated to 7.1% in 2008, down from 10.4% in 2007, mainly as a result of a slowdown in the external demand. • In 2009 the Slovak economy will grow more slowly. • Inflation increased to 4% in 2008, but will ease in 2009. • The government budget deficit is expected by the EC to have widened to 2.2% of GDP in 2008. • The current account deficit is estimated to have been 6% of GDP in 2008, and is expected to remain at that level in 2009.

  19. SK assessment by EC: employment • Employment grew by 2.3% in 2008, but is expected to slow in 2009. • Unemployment is likely to stay high, at above 10% in 2009. • The export-oriented companies, in particular the automotive sector, and employees with atypical contracts will likely be hardest hit by the slowdown. • Additional measures are needed to improve entrepreneurship, to develop an active ageing strategy and to address youth employment.

  20. SK assessment by EC: medium-term challenges • to continue reducing unemployment, notably long-term unemployment, • to improve the quality of the education and training system, • to enhance the employability of certain groups, • to gradually reduce regional differences in both income and employment. • to increase the quality of output of R&D and innovation and private sector involvement • to enhance the focus on fiscal discipline in order to ensure macro-economic stability and improve the adjustment capacity of the economy • to implement the energy and climate change package

  21. Main recommendations for SK • to continue implementation of structural reforms • within an integrated flexicurity approach to make progress in the implementation of the LLL strategy • to continue the reforms of education and training systems to address the skill mismatch, • to develop an active ageing strategy and enhances access to employment for the long-term unemployed and disadvantaged groups.

  22. New LM challenges brought by global economic crisis • protecting employment • promoting entrepreneurship • reinforcing activation schemes • improving skills and jobs matching • supporting creation of demand for labour by reducing social charges on low income jobs

  23. Message Nothing can preclude your success on the way towards better future if you have: • Clear vision and strategy • Political will and courage • Streamlined, transparent and goal-centered policies and resources • Public support and involvement

  24. References: • A European Economic Recovery Plan, COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN COUNCIL, COM(2008) 800, 2008 • Five years of an enlarged EU – Economic achievements and challenges, European Economy 1/2009, 2009, Brussels (graphs: slides 3 -6) • Implementation of the Lisbon Strategy Structural Reforms in the context of the European Economic Recovery Plan - Annual country assessments: COUNCIL RECOMMENDATION on the 2009 up-date of the broad guidelines for the economic policies of the Member States and the Community and on the implementation of Member States' employment policies, COM(2009) 34/2, 2009, Brussels • National Reform Programme of the Slovak Republic for 2008 – 2010, 2008, Bratislava (tables: slides 9-12) • Peter Goliaš: Experience of Slovak Labour Market Reform (ppt. format), INEKO – Institute for Economic and Social Reforms, 2007, Belgrade (tables: slides 14-15) • UPSVaR, unemployment statistics, 2008, Bratislava (graph: slide 7)

  25. Thank you for your attention! Mária Nádaždyová EPPP-European Public Policy Partnership Zámocká 36 814 99 Bratislava e-mail: nadazdyova@eppp.sk

More Related