PARIS (Sputnik) — The secretary general of the French National Union of Autonomous Trade Unions (UNSA) Luc Berille told Sputnik that the union condemns French President Emmanuel Macron's proposed labor legislation reforms as they give priority to enterprises and diminish employee rights.
"In the decree we see that the government thought about the enterprises first, giving more rights to them and to the heads of these enterprises, which makes the inequality between them and their employees grow," Luc Berille said.
The new labor law will make it easier for companies to lay off staff and cut overtime payments https://t.co/xlYpJ7xuXB #Macron #CGT pic.twitter.com/JG1GN8nKyO
— Sputnik (@SputnikInt) 12 сентября 2017 г.
Berille explained that the reform included concrete measures to facilitate layoffs, while the possibility to legally contest an employee's dismissal was made more difficult. The official stressed that "dismissals without a reason do not respect the law."
France's second-largest trade union #CGT is protesting against government-proposed labor reform https://t.co/xlYpJ7xuXB pic.twitter.com/DCYC4NoKY5
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"We enter into philosophy where we will facilitate the sacking of the employees for the enterprises. It is justified by the government; we oppose it saying that if we facilitate the dismissal, we must facilitate the hiring process as well. The employees will also have poorer representation in the enterprise, which, in our opinion, contradicts with the goal advertised by the government," Berille pointed out.
"Although what we have seen in other states who did it, is that sometimes it can have an impact on employment, but very often the effect is in the weakening of the labor market by switching to temporary or short-term contracts. A lot of countries who did it had to fight poverty," Berille pointed out, adding that the current text of the legislative amendments to the French labor code was "unbalanced."
The UNSA does not share Macron’s beliefs that the liberalization of the labor market through cutting the rights of employees will automatically launch a job creation mechanism, Berille added.
"We believe that the real key to create jobs is not in the labor code. It is firstly economic activity, which will give the enterprises the markets they now do not have," Berille concluded, adding that another labor code reform was not necessary in France, which had already seen four labor laws amended over the past three years.
Michel Beaugas, the secretary for employment at Force Ouvriere (Workers’ Force) trade union, also agreed that it was not the labor code that negatively affected the enterprises in France but the economic situation, the lack of economic visibility and of skilled workers.
"President Macron is pushing forward this reform, in my opinion, to show to the European Union that France is capable of reforms, even though in France we have lots of reforms, including of the labor law. The intention is to bring it closer to other European labor laws, including that of Germany," Beaugas explained.
France's second-largest trade union General Confederation of Labour (CGT) is holding a one-day strike on Tuesday to protest against the government-proposed labor reform. Thousands of protesters also took to the streets in defiance of the labor code changes.
The reform was unveiled by the French government in late August. The measures are aimed at stimulating the French economy, simplifying the procedures of hiring and firing workers and allow some workplace issues to be negotiated directly at the company level. The policy has prompted criticism from the French trade unions as shifting the balance of power from workers to employers.