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Experience of Slovak Labour Market Reform Peter Goliaš INEKO – Institute for Economic and Social Reforms 30 November, 2007 Belgrade, Serbia.

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Presentation on theme: "Experience of Slovak Labour Market Reform Peter Goliaš INEKO – Institute for Economic and Social Reforms 30 November, 2007 Belgrade, Serbia."— Presentation transcript:

1 Experience of Slovak Labour Market Reform Peter Goliaš INEKO – Institute for Economic and Social Reforms 30 November, 2007 Belgrade, Serbia

2 (Un)Employment in Slovakia Source: Statistical Office of the SR

3 FDI and GDP growth Automobile producers: PSA, KIA Source: Statistical Office of the SR (GDP), ING Bank (FDI)

4 Sources of GDP growth Tax reform (2004) 21% Privatisation by foreign investors (1998-2002) 17% Entry to the EU (2004) 12% Labour Code Amendment (2003) 10% Reforms before 1998 10% Pension reform (2004-2005) 4% Other sources 26% Source: INEKO survey among 12 local economists, March 2007

5 Labour Code Before 20032003-2007After 2007 Firing costs3+2 months2 or 3 months2+2 or 3+3 months Extension of term contractsNoIndefiniteUp to 3 years Overtime yearly150 hours400 hours Approval by union for group dismissals and firing workers YesNo Retraining before dismissalYesNo Union approval for flexible work time Yes No within 4- month period Yes Basic features of 2003 reform: More flexibility Less coercive character – setting only basic standards Weaker trade unions

6 Labour Code Source: The World Bank Doing Business in 2005

7 Social welfare reform Basic features: “It pays off to work” principle Activation benefits: 30% of social benefits conditional upon activity More frequent visits at the Labour offices The reform addressed trade-off between reducing benefit dependency and risk of poverty. Poverty risk rate 20042005 13.3%11.6% Source: Ministry of Labour Source: Headquarters of Labour, Social Affairs and Family

8 Unemployment trap Source: Eurostat More low income workers are eligible for social benefits (25% of a worker’s salary can be deducted for the purpose of determining whether a household is eligible for social benefits) Low income workers pay lower taxes (The basic tax allowance deductible from the tax base went up almost three-fold) Definition: The unemployment trap measures the % of gross earnings which is “taxed away” through higher tax and social security contributions and the withdrawal of unemployment and other benefits when an unemployed person returns to employment.

9 Child benefits Child benefits before 2004: (1) Flat benefit (270 SKK per child, monthly) – universal, regardless the income (2) Means-tested benefit (210 SKK – 620 SKK per child, monthly) (3) Tax base bonus (16,800 SKK per child, yearly) –deductible from the tax base Child benefits after 2004: (1) Flat benefit (SKK 500 per child, monthly) – universal, regardless the income (2) Tax bonus (SKK 400 per child, monthly) – bonus deductible from the income tax, conditional on at least one parent being employed. If the tax is lower than the tax bonus, the family receives the difference. Source: OECD Taxing Wages

10 Challenges for future reforms Higher qualification Source: Statistical Office of the Slovak Republic Flexible immigration policy Lower taxes on labour (Social security)

11 Thank you for your attention!


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