November 15, 2024

Pressure Mounts on France to Overhaul Labor Rules

PARIS — The French unemployment rate ended last year at its highest level since 1999, the national statistics institute reported Thursday, underscoring the urgency of President François Hollande’s task as he pushes for a far-reaching labor law overhaul intended to encourage new hiring.

The jobless rate rose to 10.6 percent in the October-December period, up 0.4 percentage point from the previous quarter, the statistics agency, Insee, said, as gross domestic product shrank 0.3 percent amid government austerity measures. Almost 26 percent of young people were classified as jobless, Insee said.

The unemployment rate has risen for six consecutive quarters, putting pressure on public finances and turning an uncomfortable spotlight on the Socialist president’s campaign promise to get the labor market moving in the right direction by the end of this year.

The answer, the government hopes, lies in a “flexicurity” agreement signed Jan. 11 by employers and unions that would give companies more freedom to hire and fire. On Wednesday, Prime Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault’s cabinet endorsed the deal, and said it would present it to Parliament for approval this spring.

“This is a win-win deal for businesses that get into trouble, that have to reorganize,” Mr. Ayrault said, adding that the accord gives companies a tool other than layoffs for addressing their problems.

The agreement, which draws on ideas pioneered in Denmark, a country with one of the world’s most flexible labor markets, would probably not have been possible a generation ago, or even under Mr. Hollande’s predecessor, Nicolas Sarkozy. But several years of crisis and economic stagnation have led to an acknowledgement across most of the political spectrum that relatively high labor costs are making it harder for French workers to compete when jobs can easily be outsourced to low-wage countries.

Those concerns have been magnified by a recent diatribe against French workers by an American tire company executive, Maurice Taylor Jr., who said he would be “stupid” to invest in a French factory, and a call for a “competitiveness shock” from a former top aerospace executive, Louis Gallois.

Stefano Scarpetta, head of the labor division at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, said the French appeared to be learning from the example set by Germany, where companies faced with a less rigid labor code have better weathered the recent crises and where unemployment, at 5.3 percent, is half the level in France.

“The lesson we learned from the German model is that by promoting internal adjustment in the firm you can reduce the impact of a shock,” he said. “The French agreement promotes that kind of adjustment.”

The Jan. 11 proposal would allow companies facing serious problems to negotiate with unions to cut working hours and wages for up to two years, reducing the incentive to lay off employees. That is particularly important, Mr. Scarpetta said, because tools like flex-time arrangements have allowed German employers to retain most of their employees by reducing the overall hours worked.

The proposal would make it easier for employees to be reassigned and would cap the amount that laid-off workers could be awarded by labor courts. Another area of major change would be the way in which layoffs are managed. Currently, companies announcing a major restructuring open themselves to time-consuming and expensive legal maneuvering. But in cases where unions oppose restructuring plans, the new accord would give companies the right to seek approval directly from government labor administrators, reducing the judiciary’s role in the process.

In exchange, employers would have to pay more of the health care costs for about 3.5 million, mostly lower-wage, workers. Companies would be discouraged from short-term hiring by a payroll tax surcharge, graduated downward as the term of contracts increased. Workers would gain seats on the boards of major enterprises. And those who were laid off would not lose their accumulated unemployment benefits as soon as they returned to work, as currently, giving them more incentive to get off the dole.

Despite the additional costs, the deal is widely backed by the corporate sector. Laurence Parisot, president of Medef, the main business lobby, on Wednesday hailed the plan as one that would help end “the divisions that for 40 years have limited France’s capacity to transform itself, to evolve, to rise to the challenges with which it is confronted.”

The question now, Mr. Scarpetta said, is how well it survives its trip through Parliament.

The principal opposition party, the center-right U.M.P., argues that the measures do not go far enough to unfetter employers, but many members are expected to support the plan provided it remains largely intact.

That support would be unnecessary if Mr. Hollande’s own parliamentary bloc were solidly behind the proposal, but there is unease among some of the government’s allies. The far-left leader Jean-Luc Mélenchon this week described the accord as “villainous” and accused Mr. Hollande of carrying through Mr. Sarkozy’s work. Perhaps more glaringly, two of France’s most militant unions — the Confédération Générale du Travail and Force Ouvrière — have refused to sign on, weakening the claim that it was made with the backing of workers.

Still, the unions have shown that they are prepared to give ground in the face of economic necessity. Force Ouvrière said Wednesday that it had agreed to restructuring plans at Renault that would allow the automaker to increase working hours, freeze wages and lay off workers.

In any case, Mr. Scarpetta said, “It’s already a good sign” that unions and employers have come this far. “It’s a step in the right direction.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/08/business/global/08iht-frenchjobs08.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Euro Watch: Euro Zone Slump Expands to Germany and France

Germany and France are now caught up in a slump that was already well under way in other big euro zone economies like Spain and Italy.

The figures were a reminder of how hard it has become for many of the world’s most economically developed countries to overcome their debt problems and return to growth. Even the United States, which had appeared to be rebounding, surprised economists late last month by reporting contraction for the fourth quarter.

In the euro zone, economic output shrank 0.6 percent from October through December, compared with the previous quarter, according to official figures published on Thursday. That came after a decline of 0.1 percent in the third quarter.

While economists had expected a decline in the fourth quarter, they did not expect it to be quite so big. The disappointing data called into question the timing of a recovery that was supposed to begin later this year. And the figures put pressure on government budgets that are already stretched because tax revenue automatically falls when companies and workers are earning less.

Almost every one of the euro zone’s 17 members suffered a drop in gross domestic product. In the three biggest euro economies, G.D.P. fell 0.6 percent in Germany, 0.3 percent in France and 0.9 percent in Italy.

For France, especially, Thursday’s data was a deep embarrassment to the government. The Socialist president, François Hollande, was elected last May after pledging to reduce the budget deficit this year to 3 percent of G.D.P., as required under euro zone rules. And his finance minister, Pierre Moscovici, had promised numerous times since then that the government would meet the 3 percent limit this year. But the lack of growth will make it all but impossible to meet that goal.

The gloomy economic data could also influence the outcome of elections later this month in Italy, in which the country’s international credibility is at stake. The prolonged slump provides ammunition to populist forces led by former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, perhaps giving his party enough seats in Parliament to block unpopular measures intended to improve the country’s economic performance.

The economic report by Eurostat, the European Union’s statistics agency, was not bad enough to kill all hope that the euro zone was on the mend and that it could see weak growth later in the year.

Industrial production for the bloc rose in December, and surveys have suggested that businesses and consumers were becoming more willing to spend because they were less afraid that the euro zone would break up under the stress of debt and banking crises.

“I think the euro zone looks a lot more stable,” said Marie Diron, an economist in London who advises the consulting firm Ernst Young. “There are surely companies in Germany and Finland which couldn’t really take the investment and equipment decisions they wanted to,” because of fears of a breakup. “Now that has disappeared.”

But Ms. Diron noted that unemployment remained high in many countries, creating political instability that was amplified by governments’ need to cut spending. “That’s really where the risk remains,” she said.

The deepest misery is still in Greece, even if fewer people are predicting that the country will have to leave the euro zone. Unemployment rose to a record 27 percent in November, the Greek Statistics Agency said on Thursday. Nearly two-thirds of young people are jobless.

The French economy has been suffering from a drop in industrial production, as large employers like the carmaker PSA Peugeot Citroën struggle to cope with plunging demand in their most important markets, including Spain, where growth last quarter fell 0.7 percent.

This week, the French government auditors, the Cour des Comptes, announced that French growth would be significantly below the 0.8 percent previously estimated by the Hollande government, making it practically impossible to keep the deficit below the goal of 3 percent of G.D.P. despite significant tax increases. The Thursday figures, showing a contraction of 0.3 percent in the fourth quarter and no growth at all in 2012, were even worse than expected.

The auditors recommended balancing the tax increases with more cuts in public spending, but the Hollande government has said that it wants to impose taxes up front and deal with more significant spending cuts in coming years. Some economists contend that France is taxing itself into a recession.

Mr. Hollande, who has argued for measures to promote economic growth as unemployment rises, acknowledged failure, telling reporters earlier this week, “There is no point sticking to objectives if they are not going to be achieved.”

Mr. Moscovici said after a cabinet meeting on Wednesday that the government did not want “to add austerity on top of austerity, either for France or for Europe.”

Among all 27 members of the European Union, including countries like Britain and the Czech Republic that are not part of the euro currency union, economic output fell 0.5 percent.

In Germany, the unexpectedly large decline in output was caused by lower exports and fewer purchases of equipment by companies.

During the first nine months of last year, Germany continued to defy the recession in the euro zone as a whole, benefiting from sales to countries outside the euro zone, especially the United States and China. But the decline in the fourth quarter illustrated Germany’s vulnerability to the fortunes of its neighbors.

In coming weeks, economists will be watching for evidence that the German economy has already begun growing again, as many predict. If so, that could help pull the rest of Europe out of recession.

“While we expect a stabilization in the first quarter and a weak recovery from the second quarter onwards,” Peter Vanden Houte, an economist at ING Bank, said in a note to clients, “one has to acknowledge that a lot of things still can go wrong.”

Steven Erlanger contributed reporting from Paris.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/15/business/global/daily-euro-zone-watch.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

You’re the Boss Blog: A Brooklyn Tea Company Backed by a Socialist President

Tyler Gage (left) and Dan MacCombie at a trade showCourtesy of Runa.Tyler Gage (left) and Dan MacCombie at a trade show

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The adventure of new ventures.

Forget its mild-mannered reputation: tea is not for the faint of heart.  Last year, the United States tea industry brought in $6.5 billion thanks to a roster of heavy hitting, fiercely competitive brands, ranging from Honest Tea to Tazo and old-time stalwarts like Lipton.

So what are the chances that Runa – a start-up company peddling an obscure Amazonian leaf called guayusa – can elbow its way into this already crowded scene? Combine seemingly long odds with Runa’s unlikely provenance: In 2008, a pair of Brown University undergrads, one doing linguistic research in the Amazon, the other studying marine biology, rerouted their career paths to become entrepreneurs after encountering the caffeinated guayusa leaf, which steeps into a potent brew, and realizing it hadn’t yet been commercialized.

Founders: Former classmates Tyler Gage and Dan MacCombie, both 26, founded Runa and are the company’s president and executive vice president, respectively.

Employees: Runa has 5 full-time employees in Brooklyn, 30 in Ecuador.

Location: Headquartered in Brooklyn, N.Y., with Ecuadorian offices in Quito and Archidona.

Pitch: “We’re a beverage company that creates livelihoods for indigenous farmers in the Amazon,” Mr. Gage said, “and we produce beverages made from guayusa tea, which has more caffeine than any tea and double the antioxidants of green tea. It’s an energy offering in the tea space.”

On top of providing income to some 1,000 farmers, Mr. Gage said Runa puts money into a “social premium fund” the workers can tap collectively to finance local development projects. “Runa” means “fully living human being” in Kichwa, an indigenous language spoken in Ecuador and Colombia.

Traction: Runa’s first big boost came in 2009, when the company won two contests in quick succession: a business plan competition at Brown University’s Entrepreneurship Program, and the Rhode Island Business Plan Competition, bringing in more than $70,000 in cash and services.

Runa’s tea bags and loose tea went on the market less than a year ago and are now available at some 1,200 stores nationwide, including Whole Foods, Kings, the Vitamin Shoppe and Wegmans. Runa also sells loose tea to larger companies — Stash and Oregon Chai, to name a couple — that use the leaves in their own blends. In March, Runa plans to introduce a line of bottled beverages, focusing at first on the New York and Boston markets.

Revenue: Runa’s revenue for last year was $277,000, according to Mr. Gage. He expects Runa to surpass $1 million in sales for 2012.

Financing: Runa has received grants totaling $500,000 from the United States Agency for International Development and Corporación Andina de Fomento, a Latin American development bank. In November, the company closed a $1.6 million round of angel investments. Now, Mr. Gage is seeking $2 million in a Series A equity round, which he hopes to close by the end of the fiscal year’s second quarter.

Runa’s most unusual backers so far? The government of Ecuador, led by socialist president Rafael Correa. In October, the country’s Ministry of Production put $500,000 into the company through a national investment program.

“The social aspect of the company’s business model — the high wages to farmers, the social benefit fund, and support for sustainable farming — are the real reason Ecuador is wise to play venture capitalist to a Brooklyn business,” wrote Alex Goldmark, a GOOD magazine contributing editor, in a recent post about the unusual investment.

But the government’s direct influence, Mr. Gage said, is limited.  “They’re very much in the backseat,” he said. “They have one of six board seats.”

Marketing: “We sponsor a lot of events, everything from design challenges to fundraisers, anywhere we can donate tea,” Mr. Gage said. The company targets young professionals with “office drops” of product samples and holds frequent tastings in grocery stores, along with guerilla offerings at concerts, in parks and on the street.

Competition: Though Runa claims to be the lone exporter of guayusa, the company faces stiff competition from purveyors of other kinds of tea, along with energy drink manufacturers and companies selling yerba mate, another South American tea-like caffeinated beverage.

Challenge:  “The biggest challenge right now is marketing,” Mr. Gage said. “We’ve actually done more than we expected in terms of getting the product on the shelf. It all comes down to getting people to try it.”

With so many teas and energy drinks already on the market, do you think Runa can build – and keep – a niche of its own?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=f5620c429a50da33513a82b6110109c9