
The exact number of employees who will actually work reduced hours will be determined by the companies in the near future.
For comparison, 42 additional companies applied for short-time work in July, but the total number of affected employees was lower than anticipated for August. This suggests that some larger companies may have requested short-time work for the upcoming month.
Access to partial unemployment, also referred to as short-time work, is governed by labour laws. These laws outline four specific scenarios under which a company may apply for short-time working:
When a company implements short-time working measures, it can impact some or all of its employees, irrespective of their employment status — whether fixed-term or permanent. During periods of partial unemployment, affected employees either work reduced hours or are not required to report to work at all.
For the hours worked, employees receive their standard hourly wage. Conversely, for the hours not worked, employers must provide compensation amounting to at least 80% of the employees’ usual hourly wage. Should partially unemployed employees engage in training programmes, they are entitled to compensation equivalent to 90% of their last hourly wage for the training hours. In both scenarios, the compensation must not fall below the unqualified minimum wage. If compensation falls short of the minimum wage, the difference is covered by the Employment Fund.
The National Employment Agency (ADEM) reimburses companies for the compensation paid during short-time working, with the reimbursement capped at 80% of the affected employee’s salary and 2.5 times the qualifying minimum wage.
Transitioning to short-time working typically results in reduced earnings for affected employees. However, no employee will receive less than the qualified minimum wage.