Eurofound's EU PolicyWatch collates information on the responses of government and social partners to the COVID-19 crisis, the war in Ukraine, rising inflation, as well as gathering examples of company practices aimed at mitigating the social and economic impacts.
Factsheet for measure HR-2014-27/2998 – measures in Croatia
Country | Croatia , applies nationwide |
Time period | Open ended, started on 30 June 2014 |
Context | COVID-19, Restructuring Support Instruments |
Type | Legislations or other statutory regulations |
Category |
Employment protection and retention
– Income support for people in employment (e.g., short-time work) |
Author | Predrag Bejakovic (IJF) |
Measure added | 23 June 2022 (updated 07 November 2022) |
When announcing the measure, the government stresses that the scheme envisages the provision of state co-financing for wages according to reduced working hours. The measure is designed to help out employers who are forced to reduce working hours due to operating difficulties and a drop in business activities. The expert for the labour market underlines that this measure should not be seen isolated and only as a measure to preserve jobs, because that is not its original idea. In a crisis, employment always decreases, this is a normal and balancing mechanism that is impossible to avoid. Therefore, the measures are taken to prevent an extremely high increase in unemployment and so that the economy does not lose its ability to quickly recover after the pandemic ends.
The wage subsidy is for workers for whom the employer, due to business difficulties, cannot ensure the payment of full salary for a five-day working week. The measure was reactivated during the COVID-19 pandemic for sectors particularly affected by the crisis and those unable to exercise their activities.
Employers in the following sectors are eligible for the wage subsidy: accommodation and restaurants, transportation and storage, health, tourism, labour intensive activities within manufacturing (such as textile, clothing, footwear, leather, wood, furniture). Furthermore, eligible are also employers whose activities have been prohibited by the government and those who can prove that their revenue is reduced by more than 20% due to the crisis. The period is not directly specified, but the application for the wage subsidy requires the provision of a tabular comparison of revenue by the end of the month in which the claim was filed with the same month of the previous year.
Sectors affected by the crisis were entitled to a wage subsidy by the public employment service amounting to HRK 4,000 (€ 534) per month for a full-time worker and HRK 2,625 (€267) per month for a part-time worker. In Croatia, full-time is 40 hours per week, while part-time is deemed 20 hours per week. According to the data by the Croatian Pension Insurance Institute, only around 4-5% of all employees were working part-time. There are people that are working fewer hours, for example, in education, but this is very rare, less than 1% of all employees.
According to the amended conditions as of 6 April 2020, employers are eligible for support:
The subsidy is not granted if the employer dismisses more than:
According to the annual reports of the Croatian Employment Service (CES), subsidies paid to employers for employment preservation amounted to only HRK 20,139 (€2,677) in 2009 and HRK 26,409 (€3,515) in 2010. In 2012, there were 170 new participants out of a total of 703 participants in the measure, while in 2013 the total number was 1,310. In the annual report of the CES from 2014 to 2019, no new cases or users of this measure are mentioned. During the COVID-19 crisis, by the end of May 2020, 98,532 employers with 486 thousand workers received support.
Workers | Businesses | Citizens |
---|---|---|
Employees in standard employment
|
Applies to all businesses | Does not apply to citizens |
Actors | Funding |
---|---|
National government
Public employment service |
European Funds
National funds |
Social partners' role in designing the measure and form of involvement:
Trade unions | Employers' organisations | |
---|---|---|
Role | Consulted | Consulted |
Form | Any other form of consultation, institutionalised (as stable working groups or committees) or informal | Any other form of consultation, institutionalised (as stable working groups or committees) or informal |
Social partners' role in the implementation, monitoring and assessment phase:
The representatives of social partners - from representative trade unions, primarily two biggest TU confederations - the Union of Autonomous Trade Union of Croatia (Savez samostalnih sindikata Hrvatske) and Independent Trade Unions of Croatia (Nezavisni hrvatski sindikati) from workers' side and representatives of Croatian Employers’ Association, from employers' side, are members of the Governing board of the Croatian Employment Service. Therefore, in that way they participate in the design, implementation and monitoring of the measure. During June 2020, the government had actively communicated with social partners and the Ministries of finance and economy regarding the implementation of the European Commission's SURE job-keeping programme. They finally agreed and the government on its session held on 25 June 2020 accepted the Decision on a new job retention scheme for companies affected by the coronavirus crisis.
Social partners are fully aware of the importance of support for preservation of jobs as a timely and effective active employment policy and always support its implementation.
Citation
Eurofound (2022), Non-working Friday – support for preserving jobs, measure HR-2014-27/2998 (measures in Croatia), EU PolicyWatch, Dublin, https://static.eurofound.europa.eu/covid19db/cases/HR-2014-27_2998.html
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