{"change_dates":[],"dossier":{"amendments":[],"changes":{"2014-11-10T01:23:34":[{"data":[{"body":"EC","commission":[{"Commissioner":"\u0160PIDLA Vladim\u00edr","DG":{"title":"Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion","url":"http://ec.europa.eu/social/"}}],"date":"2007-06-27T00:00:00","docs":[{"celexid":"CELEX:52007DC0359:EN","text":["
PURPOSE: Communication\n from the Commission on common “Flexicurity” principles.
CONTENT: the\n Commission has prepared this Communication within the context of the revised\n Lisbon Agenda and the National Reform Programmes in which the ability of the\n EU’s workforce and enterprises to adapt to change are key objectives. The\n purpose of the paper is to launch a comprehensive debate between the EU\n institutions, the Member States, the social partners and other stakeholders\n on flexicurity, so that the European Council may adopt, by the end of 2007, a set of common principles.
The Commission\n attempts to define “flexicurity” as an integrated strategy to reconcile\n labour flexibility with job security. It seeks to create a situation in which\n security, on the one hand, and flexibility, on the other, can mutually\n reinforce each other.
Globalisation\n has forced the way in which the EU’s citizens live and work to change\n rapidly. This has brought both advantages and disadvantages. Overall, globalisation\n has benefited both growth and employment but the change it has brought\n requires rapid responses from both enterprises and workers alike. Adaptation\n requires a more flexible labour market than is currently the case, combined\n with high levels of security.
In a 2006\n Eurobarometer survey European citizens seemed to accept the need for change.\n 76% of Europeans agree that lifetime jobs with the same employer are a thing\n of the past. Similarly, 76% consider that being able to change easily from\n one job to another is a useful asset to finding work. 72% of people said work\n contracts should become more flexible to encourage job creation and finally\n 88% of citizens said that regular training improves job opportunities.
Flexicurity,\n according to the paper, is about successful transitions during the course of\n one’s education and career: from school to work, from one job to another,\n between unemployment or work inactivity and from work to retirement. It\n should not represent companies’ freedom to recruit or dismiss and it does not\n imply that open-ended contracts are obsolete. It is about workers’ progress\n into better jobs and the optimal development of talent. Flexicurity is also\n about mastering new productive needs and skills, equipping people with the\n skills they need to progress and to help them find new employment.
In order to\n realise an equitable system of flexicurity the Commission outlines eight\n possible common principles, namely:
1. Flexible\n and reliable contractual arrangements that includes lifelong learning\n strategies. Its purpose: to create more and better jobs.
2. Finding the\n correct balance between the rights and responsibility of employers, workers,\n job seekers and public authorities.
3. The ability\n to change to specific circumstances – not a “one labour model fits all”\n approach.
4. Reducing\n the dividing line between “insiders” and “outsiders”. Outsiders being\n typically women, the young and migrants.
5. Securing\n flexibility in recruiting labour and dismissing labour accompanied by secure\n transitions from one job to another.
6. Supporting\n gender equality and promoting equal access to quality employment by\n reconciling work with family life and by providing equal opportunities to\n migrants, the young, disabled and older workers.
7. Encouraging\n a climate of trust and dialogue between public authorities and social\n partners.
8. Aiming for\n sound and financially sustainable budgetary policies. Cost should be\n equitably borne between businesses, individual and public budgets.
In order to\n implement the common principles in the Member States, a carefully planned and\n negotiated combination of policies is proposed, referred to as “flexicurity\n pathways”. The Commission recognises that each Member State has its own\n policies and flexicurity is not about one single labour market model or a\n single policy strategy. Nevertheless, a number of broad “typical”\n combinations can be identified. The four pathways set out in the\n Communication are based on Member States’ reports as set out in the\n “Flexicurity Expert Group”. The four pathways, in summary, are:
Pathway 1:\n tackling contractual segmentation: This pathway\n will be of interest to counties where segmented labour markets (with insiders\n and outsiders) are common. The purpose of this pathway would be to distribute\n flexibility and security more evenly amongst the workforce. It would also\n provide entry ports into employment for newcomers and it would promote their\n progress into better contractual arrangements.
Pathway 2:\n developing flexicurity within enterprises and offering transitional security: This pathway would be of interest to countries with relatively\n low job-flows. For example it could help increase investment by allowing\n workers within enterprises to continuously update their capabilities and, for\n example, production methods. It would look beyond the actual job by putting a\n system in place that provides safe and successful job to job transitions in\n the case of company restructuring and redundancies.
Pathway 3:\n tackling skills and opportunity gaps among the workforce: This pathway would be of interest to countries where the\n key challenges include large skills and opportunity gaps amongst the working\n population. It would promote opportunities for low-skilled workers allowing\n them to enter into employment and to develop their skills in order to obtain\n a sustainable position on the labour market.
Pathway 4:\n improving opportunities for benefit recipients and informally employed\n workers: This pathway would be of interest to\n countries which have experienced substantive economic restructuring in recent\n years the results of which are a high number of unemployed and on long-term\n benefits. It would seek to improve opportunities for those on welfare\n benefits and those who are shifting from informal to formal employment.\n Lifelong learning systems would be combined with an adequate level of\n unemployment benefits.
\nThe Council\n adopted the following conclusions on flexicurity. Faced with a rapidly\n changing global economy, structural change and ageing population, the Council\n believes that policy makers need to find the right responses to achieve both\n flexibility and security, which in the right policy environment can be\n mutually reinforcing and can become a useful tool to increase a country’s\n international competitiveness.
The\n flexicurity approach provides a good platform to develop comprehensive\n strategies that enhance overall labour market flexibility and support\n workers’ mobility, while also enhancing workers' security through the\n promotion of job creation, comprehensive lifelong learning strategies,\n assistance in transitions, and adequate support by social systems. Moreover,\n higher employment and better opportunities for all can be delivered together\n with flexibility and security.
The Council\n makes the following observations:
The Council\n invites the Economic Policy Committee and the Commission to closely follow\n the implementation of flexicurity strategies within the framework of the\n Growth and Jobs strategy, in particular by monitoring its budgetary impact\n and deepening the analysis of the cost-effectiveness and efficiency of\n measures in the context of the flexicurity strategy of each country as a\n whole.
\nThe Committee\n on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the initiative report drafted by Ole\n CHRISTENSEN (PES, DK) which proposes a set of common principles of\n flexicurity.
The report\n strongly endorses the conclusion that flexibility can be in the interests of\n the employee as well as the employer, and that this can be achieved through\n promoting adaptable and reliable contractual arrangements, including\n permanent contracts. It also emphasises that flexicurity can be an effective\n policy strategy for the reform of the labour market and as such must be\n comprehensive by including all the existing facets of employment and social\n policy at both national and EU levels.
The committee\n believes that the biggest problems in the EU concern the supply of a skilled\n and adaptable workforce in competitive and innovative companies. It stresses\n that the priority should be given to the creation of a flexible labour market\n by raising educational levels and expanding apprenticeship opportunities,\n training and retraining programmes; by implementing effective policies\n against discrimination and by breaking down barriers to the integration into\n the labour force of women, migrants, older or younger workers and other\n discriminated disadvantaged groups; by removing obstacles to occupational and\n geographic mobility; and by active labour market policies that support the\n transition from an old job to a new job emphasises the decisive role of\n skilled and adaptable employees and new technologies in education and\n training and recalls the new forms of flexibility offered by the social\n partners' agreement on teleworking, part-time and fixed-term work.
The report\n notes that flexicurity should support and implement gender equality by\n promoting equal access to quality employment for women and men and by\n providing possibilities for reconciling work and family lives, particularly\n in view of the fact that three-quarters of new jobs created in the EU since\n 2000 are occupied by women, often already under flexible and less secure\n employment contracts.
It proposes,\n therefore, that the European Council in December 2007 adopt a more balanced\n set of common principles of flexicurity, based on the creation of quality\n employment and the strengthening of the values of the European Social Model\n and considers that those principles should include:
After the\n adoption by the European Council the common principles should become part of\n the \"Integrated Guidelines for Growth and Jobs\" and shall thus\n become part of the Member States' national reform programmes.
The Commission\n and the Member States should pay particular attention to the legal\n situation of the self-employed, small businesses and SMEs, which is\n characterised by a high level of economic dependence on their customers, and\n to consider together the most appropriate legislative means to raise their\n level of social protection. The report calls a renewed fight against undeclared\n work and the black economy.
MEPs regret\n that the Council has failed to progress key employment dossiers which\n could help promote flexicurity as a positive concept.
Furthermore, the\n committee underlines the need to include educational and training measures in\n a wider flexicurity agenda and stresses that lifelong learning should address\n opportunity gaps among workers and must start at the initial education\n system. It stresses the need to introduce policies that prevent worker\n exploitation through the accumulation of non-standard contracts that\n do not contain the same rights as full-time employment contracts and calls for\n every Community employment policy to continue to keep the traditional model\n of the open-ended employment contract, which forms the basis of the\n social security systems in Member States.
Member States\n are called upon to introduce measures, in order to promote equal access to\n quality employment for women and men that comply with the European Pact for\n Gender Equality and to close the existing gender pay. They are also asked to\n reduce their policies of putting workers into early retirement and to\n introduce arrangements supporting the flexible retirement of older workers\n through part-time part-time employment, job-sharing and similar schemes that\n promote active ageing and may increase the integration of older workers into\n the labour market.
Lastly, the\n report calls for a revision of the Employment Guidelines to allow\n aspects of flexicurity to be taken into account and also for the inclusion of\n a specific chapter regarding the quality and strength of social dialogue in\n the annual Joint Employment Report. It notes that the measures that fall\n within the Employment Guidelines, including flexicurity, are eligible for the\n European Social Fund (ESF) support, in particular training and active labour\n market measures, and calls on Member States to ensure that ESF programmes\n contribute to the implementation of the European Employment Strategy and to\n flexicurity strategies.
\nThe European Parliament adopted a resolution based on the\n own-initiative report drafted by Ole CHRISTENSEN (PES, DK) in response\n to the Commission communication entitled, 'Towards\n Common Principles of Flexicurity: More and better jobs through flexibility\n and security'. The report was adopted by 496 votes in favour to 92 against\n with 49 abstentions. It pointed out that the term \"flexicurity\"\n arouses strong concerns among some European workers, who fear increased job\n insecurity, and therefore that term and the firm principles it covers, should\n be defined as precisely as possible.
The rationale\n for an integrated approach to flexicurity is the need to achieve the\n objectives of the renewed Lisbon Strategy, in particular more and better\n jobs, and at the same time to modernise the European social models, which\n requires policies that address the flexibility of labour markets, work\n organisation and labour relations, and employment and social security.
Parliament\n recognised that, in order to succeed in the 21st century, Europe needs a\n well- educated workforce as well as companies that are quick to seize\n opportunities that arise in a fast-moving world to increase productivity and\n enhance innovation. It strongly endorsed the conclusion that flexibility\n can be in the interests of the employee as well as the employer, and that\n this can be achieved through promoting adaptable and reliable contractual\n arrangements. It emphasises, however, that flexicurity can be a policy\n strategy for the reform of the labour market and, as such, must be\n comprehensive by including all the existing facets of employment and social\n policy at both national and EU level.
Members felt\n that, in view of the changes in national social security systems and labour\n law, the interpretation of the Commission's flexicurity options is too\n one-sided, since it takes no account of the costs the measures involve. The\n Commission was asked to carry out a cost-benefit analysis on those\n options. They also noted with deep concern that the Commission communication\n completely disregards the obligations and responsibilities set out in the\n Commission communication entitled, 'A Roadmap for equality between women and\n men\". The implementation of a set of common principles for flexicurity\n needs to be gender-mainstreamed and take into account a variety of\n factors, such as : the over-representation of women in non-standard\n employment (non-standard, fixed-term, part-time contracts) and the need to\n implement gender-mainstreamed labour policies; frequent switching between\n work and care activities among women and the need for proper protection and\n social benefits during transitional periods (care, family responsibilities,\n education, training and re-training); and the specific situation of single\n parents, the vast majority of whom are women.
Parliament\n believed that one of the problems in the EU concerns the supply of a skilled\n and adaptable workforce in competitive and innovative companies. Priority\n should be given to the creation of a flexible labour market by raising\n educational levels and expanding apprenticeship opportunities, training\n and retraining programmes; implementing effective policies against\n discrimination and breaking down barriers to the integration into the labour\n force of women, migrants, older or younger workers and other discriminated\n disadvantaged groups; removing obstacles to occupational and geographic\n mobility; and active labour market policies that support the transition from\n an old job to a new job. Parliament proposed that the Council examine, by the\n end of 2007, the possibility of bringing forward the date for lifting the\n transitional measures obstructing the freedom of movement for workers from\n eight of the new Member States to 1 January 2009. Removing obstacles to\n mobility by the end of 2008 would send an important political message\n confirming the EU's commitment to doing its utmost to improving workers\"\n geographic and occupational mobility;
The report\n proposed that the European Council in December 2007 adopt a more balanced set\n of common principles of flexicurity, which should include:
- promoting\n stable employment relationships and sustainable labour market practices;
- action for\n adaptable and reliable contractual arrangements and action against abusive\n labour practices especially in certain non-standard contracts;
- breaking\n down labour market segmentation by promoting employment security and\n improving job security; all workers should have a core of rights regardless\n of their employment status;
- reconciling\n employment and private life, and promoting the concept of 'decent work';
- partnership\n between government (at local, regional and national level), social partners\n and civil society in managing change;
- gender\n equality and promoting equal opportunities for all;
- designing\n and implementing national pathways in close consultation with social\n partners, in accordance with national customs and practices;
- enhancing\n companies' and workers' adaptability by strengthening transition security by\n better mobilising active labour market policies;
- a skilled\n and adaptable labour force, combining active labour market policies with\n investment in lifelong learning to enhance employability;
- a\n macro-economic framework for balanced and sustainable growth and more and\n better jobs;
Parliament\n called for a renewed fight against undeclared work and the black economy,\n which damages the economy, leaves workers unprotected, is detrimental to\n consumers, reduces tax revenues and leads to unfair competition between firms.\n The Commission was asked to combat undeclared work through more efficient\n administrative cooperation between national labour inspectorates and/or\n social partners.
Parliament\n stressed that all models of flexicurity should be based on common values that\n underpin the European Social Model. It believed that flexibility and\n security requirements reinforce one another and that flexicurity allows firms\n and workers to adapt appropriately to the new international situation, with\n strong competition from the emerging economies, while maintaining a high\n level of social protection. It highlighted, moreover, the success of\n effective collective bargaining that strong and representative social\n partners can provide and also emphasised the need for broad welfare\n provisions and universal access to good quality services, such as childcare\n and care for other dependants. Guaranteeing those levels of social protection\n could support labour mobility and structural change by increasing the\n willingness to take risks. Well-designed job protection systems provide\n business with the incentives to invest in workers’ skills and look for\n innovative ways to restructure, thereby enhancing internal flexibility and\n adaptability of business.
The report emphasised\n that the fight against labour market segmentation should include the\n provision of a core of rights for all employees regardless of their\n specific employment status, which should include: equal treatment,\n protection of workers' health and safety and provisions on working and rest\n time, freedom of association and representation, protection against unfair\n dismissal, collective bargaining and collective action. It emphasised the\n importance of access to training as well as the continued protection of\n acquired rights by covering periods of education and training, improved care\n opportunities, maintaining essential social rights such as pension rights,\n training rights and right to unemployment benefits during changes in\n occupational situation between employment contracts and from dependent to\n autonomous employment. It also called for every Community employment policy\n to continue to keep the traditional model of the open-ended employment contract,\n which forms the basis of the social security systems in Member States.
Parliament\n also called for the following :
- the creation\n of comprehensive lifelong learning systems, also applicable to workers\n with non-standard contracts;
- strengthening\n systems of industrial relations at EU and national level as a key to reaching\n and implementing flexicurity policies that are balanced ;
- measures to\n promote equal access to quality employment for women and men that comply with\n the European Pact for Gender Equality and the Communication on the\n Demographic Future of Europe. Member States must also close the existing\n gender pay gap;
- Member\n States and social partners to reduce their policies of putting workers into\n early retirement and to introduce arrangements that support the flexible\n retirement of older workers through part-time employment, job-sharing and\n similar schemes that promote active ageing and may increase the integration\n of older workers into the labour market;
- revision of the\n Employment Guidelines to allow flexicurity to be taken into account;
- the\n inclusion of a specific chapter regarding the quality and strength of social\n dialogue in the annual Joint Employment Report.
Lastly,\n Parliament called on the European Council and the Commission to set an\n ambitious reform agenda both at EU and national level. Together with\n Parliament, the institutions must draw up a vision for the future of\n social Europe. In order to strengthen growth and increase levels of\n employment, social rights and protection, which are firmly anchored in\n European tradition, must be ensured. The European Social Model, together with\n ambitious national reforms to promote more employment, will offer real added\n value for working people using all the tools at its disposal. Parliament believed\n that only an internal market which balances economic freedom with social\n rights can obtain the support of its citizens.
\nPURPOSE: Communication\n from the Commission on common “Flexicurity” principles.
CONTENT: the\n Commission has prepared this Communication within the context of the revised\n Lisbon Agenda and the National Reform Programmes in which the ability of the\n EU’s workforce and enterprises to adapt to change are key objectives. The\n purpose of the paper is to launch a comprehensive debate between the EU\n institutions, the Member States, the social partners and other stakeholders\n on flexicurity, so that the European Council may adopt, by the end of 2007, a set of common principles.
The Commission\n attempts to define “flexicurity” as an integrated strategy to reconcile\n labour flexibility with job security. It seeks to create a situation in which\n security, on the one hand, and flexibility, on the other, can mutually\n reinforce each other.
Globalisation\n has forced the way in which the EU’s citizens live and work to change\n rapidly. This has brought both advantages and disadvantages. Overall, globalisation\n has benefited both growth and employment but the change it has brought\n requires rapid responses from both enterprises and workers alike. Adaptation\n requires a more flexible labour market than is currently the case, combined\n with high levels of security.
In a 2006\n Eurobarometer survey European citizens seemed to accept the need for change.\n 76% of Europeans agree that lifetime jobs with the same employer are a thing\n of the past. Similarly, 76% consider that being able to change easily from\n one job to another is a useful asset to finding work. 72% of people said work\n contracts should become more flexible to encourage job creation and finally\n 88% of citizens said that regular training improves job opportunities.
Flexicurity,\n according to the paper, is about successful transitions during the course of\n one’s education and career: from school to work, from one job to another,\n between unemployment or work inactivity and from work to retirement. It\n should not represent companies’ freedom to recruit or dismiss and it does not\n imply that open-ended contracts are obsolete. It is about workers’ progress\n into better jobs and the optimal development of talent. Flexicurity is also\n about mastering new productive needs and skills, equipping people with the\n skills they need to progress and to help them find new employment.
In order to\n realise an equitable system of flexicurity the Commission outlines eight\n possible common principles, namely:
1. Flexible\n and reliable contractual arrangements that includes lifelong learning\n strategies. Its purpose: to create more and better jobs.
2. Finding the\n correct balance between the rights and responsibility of employers, workers,\n job seekers and public authorities.
3. The ability\n to change to specific circumstances – not a “one labour model fits all”\n approach.
4. Reducing\n the dividing line between “insiders” and “outsiders”. Outsiders being\n typically women, the young and migrants.
5. Securing\n flexibility in recruiting labour and dismissing labour accompanied by secure\n transitions from one job to another.
6. Supporting\n gender equality and promoting equal access to quality employment by\n reconciling work with family life and by providing equal opportunities to\n migrants, the young, disabled and older workers.
7. Encouraging\n a climate of trust and dialogue between public authorities and social\n partners.
8. Aiming for\n sound and financially sustainable budgetary policies. Cost should be\n equitably borne between businesses, individual and public budgets.
In order to\n implement the common principles in the Member States, a carefully planned and\n negotiated combination of policies is proposed, referred to as “flexicurity\n pathways”. The Commission recognises that each Member State has its own\n policies and flexicurity is not about one single labour market model or a\n single policy strategy. Nevertheless, a number of broad “typical”\n combinations can be identified. The four pathways set out in the\n Communication are based on Member States’ reports as set out in the\n “Flexicurity Expert Group”. The four pathways, in summary, are:
Pathway 1:\n tackling contractual segmentation: This pathway\n will be of interest to counties where segmented labour markets (with insiders\n and outsiders) are common. The purpose of this pathway would be to distribute\n flexibility and security more evenly amongst the workforce. It would also\n provide entry ports into employment for newcomers and it would promote their\n progress into better contractual arrangements.
Pathway 2:\n developing flexicurity within enterprises and offering transitional security: This pathway would be of interest to countries with relatively\n low job-flows. For example it could help increase investment by allowing\n workers within enterprises to continuously update their capabilities and, for\n example, production methods. It would look beyond the actual job by putting a\n system in place that provides safe and successful job to job transitions in\n the case of company restructuring and redundancies.
Pathway 3:\n tackling skills and opportunity gaps among the workforce: This pathway would be of interest to countries where the\n key challenges include large skills and opportunity gaps amongst the working\n population. It would promote opportunities for low-skilled workers allowing\n them to enter into employment and to develop their skills in order to obtain\n a sustainable position on the labour market.
Pathway 4:\n improving opportunities for benefit recipients and informally employed\n workers: This pathway would be of interest to\n countries which have experienced substantive economic restructuring in recent\n years the results of which are a high number of unemployed and on long-term\n benefits. It would seek to improve opportunities for those on welfare\n benefits and those who are shifting from informal to formal employment.\n Lifelong learning systems would be combined with an adequate level of\n unemployment benefits.
\nThe Council\n adopted the following conclusions on flexicurity. Faced with a rapidly\n changing global economy, structural change and ageing population, the Council\n believes that policy makers need to find the right responses to achieve both\n flexibility and security, which in the right policy environment can be\n mutually reinforcing and can become a useful tool to increase a country’s\n international competitiveness.
The\n flexicurity approach provides a good platform to develop comprehensive\n strategies that enhance overall labour market flexibility and support\n workers’ mobility, while also enhancing workers' security through the\n promotion of job creation, comprehensive lifelong learning strategies,\n assistance in transitions, and adequate support by social systems. Moreover,\n higher employment and better opportunities for all can be delivered together\n with flexibility and security.
The Council\n makes the following observations:
The Council\n invites the Economic Policy Committee and the Commission to closely follow\n the implementation of flexicurity strategies within the framework of the\n Growth and Jobs strategy, in particular by monitoring its budgetary impact\n and deepening the analysis of the cost-effectiveness and efficiency of\n measures in the context of the flexicurity strategy of each country as a\n whole.
\nThe Committee\n on Employment and Social Affairs adopted the initiative report drafted by Ole\n CHRISTENSEN (PES, DK) which proposes a set of common principles of\n flexicurity.
The report\n strongly endorses the conclusion that flexibility can be in the interests of\n the employee as well as the employer, and that this can be achieved through\n promoting adaptable and reliable contractual arrangements, including\n permanent contracts. It also emphasises that flexicurity can be an effective\n policy strategy for the reform of the labour market and as such must be\n comprehensive by including all the existing facets of employment and social\n policy at both national and EU levels.
The committee\n believes that the biggest problems in the EU concern the supply of a skilled\n and adaptable workforce in competitive and innovative companies. It stresses\n that the priority should be given to the creation of a flexible labour market\n by raising educational levels and expanding apprenticeship opportunities,\n training and retraining programmes; by implementing effective policies\n against discrimination and by breaking down barriers to the integration into\n the labour force of women, migrants, older or younger workers and other\n discriminated disadvantaged groups; by removing obstacles to occupational and\n geographic mobility; and by active labour market policies that support the\n transition from an old job to a new job emphasises the decisive role of\n skilled and adaptable employees and new technologies in education and\n training and recalls the new forms of flexibility offered by the social\n partners' agreement on teleworking, part-time and fixed-term work.
The report\n notes that flexicurity should support and implement gender equality by\n promoting equal access to quality employment for women and men and by\n providing possibilities for reconciling work and family lives, particularly\n in view of the fact that three-quarters of new jobs created in the EU since\n 2000 are occupied by women, often already under flexible and less secure\n employment contracts.
It proposes,\n therefore, that the European Council in December 2007 adopt a more balanced\n set of common principles of flexicurity, based on the creation of quality\n employment and the strengthening of the values of the European Social Model\n and considers that those principles should include:
After the\n adoption by the European Council the common principles should become part of\n the \"Integrated Guidelines for Growth and Jobs\" and shall thus\n become part of the Member States' national reform programmes.
The Commission\n and the Member States should pay particular attention to the legal\n situation of the self-employed, small businesses and SMEs, which is\n characterised by a high level of economic dependence on their customers, and\n to consider together the most appropriate legislative means to raise their\n level of social protection. The report calls a renewed fight against undeclared\n work and the black economy.
MEPs regret\n that the Council has failed to progress key employment dossiers which\n could help promote flexicurity as a positive concept.
Furthermore, the\n committee underlines the need to include educational and training measures in\n a wider flexicurity agenda and stresses that lifelong learning should address\n opportunity gaps among workers and must start at the initial education\n system. It stresses the need to introduce policies that prevent worker\n exploitation through the accumulation of non-standard contracts that\n do not contain the same rights as full-time employment contracts and calls for\n every Community employment policy to continue to keep the traditional model\n of the open-ended employment contract, which forms the basis of the\n social security systems in Member States.
Member States\n are called upon to introduce measures, in order to promote equal access to\n quality employment for women and men that comply with the European Pact for\n Gender Equality and to close the existing gender pay. They are also asked to\n reduce their policies of putting workers into early retirement and to\n introduce arrangements supporting the flexible retirement of older workers\n through part-time part-time employment, job-sharing and similar schemes that\n promote active ageing and may increase the integration of older workers into\n the labour market.
Lastly, the\n report calls for a revision of the Employment Guidelines to allow\n aspects of flexicurity to be taken into account and also for the inclusion of\n a specific chapter regarding the quality and strength of social dialogue in\n the annual Joint Employment Report. It notes that the measures that fall\n within the Employment Guidelines, including flexicurity, are eligible for the\n European Social Fund (ESF) support, in particular training and active labour\n market measures, and calls on Member States to ensure that ESF programmes\n contribute to the implementation of the European Employment Strategy and to\n flexicurity strategies.
\nThe European Parliament adopted a resolution based on the\n own-initiative report drafted by Ole CHRISTENSEN (PES, DK) in response\n to the Commission communication entitled, 'Towards\n Common Principles of Flexicurity: More and better jobs through flexibility\n and security'. The report was adopted by 496 votes in favour to 92 against\n with 49 abstentions. It pointed out that the term \"flexicurity\"\n arouses strong concerns among some European workers, who fear increased job\n insecurity, and therefore that term and the firm principles it covers, should\n be defined as precisely as possible.
The rationale\n for an integrated approach to flexicurity is the need to achieve the\n objectives of the renewed Lisbon Strategy, in particular more and better\n jobs, and at the same time to modernise the European social models, which\n requires policies that address the flexibility of labour markets, work\n organisation and labour relations, and employment and social security.
Parliament\n recognised that, in order to succeed in the 21st century, Europe needs a\n well- educated workforce as well as companies that are quick to seize\n opportunities that arise in a fast-moving world to increase productivity and\n enhance innovation. It strongly endorsed the conclusion that flexibility\n can be in the interests of the employee as well as the employer, and that\n this can be achieved through promoting adaptable and reliable contractual\n arrangements. It emphasises, however, that flexicurity can be a policy\n strategy for the reform of the labour market and, as such, must be\n comprehensive by including all the existing facets of employment and social\n policy at both national and EU level.
Members felt\n that, in view of the changes in national social security systems and labour\n law, the interpretation of the Commission's flexicurity options is too\n one-sided, since it takes no account of the costs the measures involve. The\n Commission was asked to carry out a cost-benefit analysis on those\n options. They also noted with deep concern that the Commission communication\n completely disregards the obligations and responsibilities set out in the\n Commission communication entitled, 'A Roadmap for equality between women and\n men\". The implementation of a set of common principles for flexicurity\n needs to be gender-mainstreamed and take into account a variety of\n factors, such as : the over-representation of women in non-standard\n employment (non-standard, fixed-term, part-time contracts) and the need to\n implement gender-mainstreamed labour policies; frequent switching between\n work and care activities among women and the need for proper protection and\n social benefits during transitional periods (care, family responsibilities,\n education, training and re-training); and the specific situation of single\n parents, the vast majority of whom are women.
Parliament\n believed that one of the problems in the EU concerns the supply of a skilled\n and adaptable workforce in competitive and innovative companies. Priority\n should be given to the creation of a flexible labour market by raising\n educational levels and expanding apprenticeship opportunities, training\n and retraining programmes; implementing effective policies against\n discrimination and breaking down barriers to the integration into the labour\n force of women, migrants, older or younger workers and other discriminated\n disadvantaged groups; removing obstacles to occupational and geographic\n mobility; and active labour market policies that support the transition from\n an old job to a new job. Parliament proposed that the Council examine, by the\n end of 2007, the possibility of bringing forward the date for lifting the\n transitional measures obstructing the freedom of movement for workers from\n eight of the new Member States to 1 January 2009. Removing obstacles to\n mobility by the end of 2008 would send an important political message\n confirming the EU's commitment to doing its utmost to improving workers\"\n geographic and occupational mobility;
The report\n proposed that the European Council in December 2007 adopt a more balanced set\n of common principles of flexicurity, which should include:
- promoting\n stable employment relationships and sustainable labour market practices;
- action for\n adaptable and reliable contractual arrangements and action against abusive\n labour practices especially in certain non-standard contracts;
- breaking\n down labour market segmentation by promoting employment security and\n improving job security; all workers should have a core of rights regardless\n of their employment status;
- reconciling\n employment and private life, and promoting the concept of 'decent work';
- partnership\n between government (at local, regional and national level), social partners\n and civil society in managing change;
- gender\n equality and promoting equal opportunities for all;
- designing\n and implementing national pathways in close consultation with social\n partners, in accordance with national customs and practices;
- enhancing\n companies' and workers' adaptability by strengthening transition security by\n better mobilising active labour market policies;
- a skilled\n and adaptable labour force, combining active labour market policies with\n investment in lifelong learning to enhance employability;
- a\n macro-economic framework for balanced and sustainable growth and more and\n better jobs;
Parliament\n called for a renewed fight against undeclared work and the black economy,\n which damages the economy, leaves workers unprotected, is detrimental to\n consumers, reduces tax revenues and leads to unfair competition between firms.\n The Commission was asked to combat undeclared work through more efficient\n administrative cooperation between national labour inspectorates and/or\n social partners.
Parliament\n stressed that all models of flexicurity should be based on common values that\n underpin the European Social Model. It believed that flexibility and\n security requirements reinforce one another and that flexicurity allows firms\n and workers to adapt appropriately to the new international situation, with\n strong competition from the emerging economies, while maintaining a high\n level of social protection. It highlighted, moreover, the success of\n effective collective bargaining that strong and representative social\n partners can provide and also emphasised the need for broad welfare\n provisions and universal access to good quality services, such as childcare\n and care for other dependants. Guaranteeing those levels of social protection\n could support labour mobility and structural change by increasing the\n willingness to take risks. Well-designed job protection systems provide\n business with the incentives to invest in workers’ skills and look for\n innovative ways to restructure, thereby enhancing internal flexibility and\n adaptability of business.
The report emphasised\n that the fight against labour market segmentation should include the\n provision of a core of rights for all employees regardless of their\n specific employment status, which should include: equal treatment,\n protection of workers' health and safety and provisions on working and rest\n time, freedom of association and representation, protection against unfair\n dismissal, collective bargaining and collective action. It emphasised the\n importance of access to training as well as the continued protection of\n acquired rights by covering periods of education and training, improved care\n opportunities, maintaining essential social rights such as pension rights,\n training rights and right to unemployment benefits during changes in\n occupational situation between employment contracts and from dependent to\n autonomous employment. It also called for every Community employment policy\n to continue to keep the traditional model of the open-ended employment contract,\n which forms the basis of the social security systems in Member States.
Parliament\n also called for the following :
- the creation\n of comprehensive lifelong learning systems, also applicable to workers\n with non-standard contracts;
- strengthening\n systems of industrial relations at EU and national level as a key to reaching\n and implementing flexicurity policies that are balanced ;
- measures to\n promote equal access to quality employment for women and men that comply with\n the European Pact for Gender Equality and the Communication on the\n Demographic Future of Europe. Member States must also close the existing\n gender pay gap;
- Member\n States and social partners to reduce their policies of putting workers into\n early retirement and to introduce arrangements that support the flexible\n retirement of older workers through part-time employment, job-sharing and\n similar schemes that promote active ageing and may increase the integration\n of older workers into the labour market;
- revision of the\n Employment Guidelines to allow flexicurity to be taken into account;
- the\n inclusion of a specific chapter regarding the quality and strength of social\n dialogue in the annual Joint Employment Report.
Lastly,\n Parliament called on the European Council and the Commission to set an\n ambitious reform agenda both at EU and national level. Together with\n Parliament, the institutions must draw up a vision for the future of\n social Europe. In order to strengthen growth and increase levels of\n employment, social rights and protection, which are firmly anchored in\n European tradition, must be ensured. The European Social Model, together with\n ambitious national reforms to promote more employment, will offer real added\n value for working people using all the tools at its disposal. Parliament believed\n that only an internal market which balances economic freedom with social\n rights can obtain the support of its citizens.
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