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WORKING IN DENMARK

Danish trade union members vote yes to new bargaining agreement

A new collective bargaining agreement was approved by Danish trade union members on Wednesday, securing working conditions for around 600,000 private sector workers for the coming years.

Danish trade union members vote yes to new bargaining agreement
People turn out in support of trade unions during collective bargaining talks in Copenhagen in January. Photo: Sebastian Elias Uth/Ritzau Scanpix

Around 79 percent of the union members who voted did so in favour of the agreement, which was reached by union representatives and employer confederations during negotiations earlier this year.

Turnout in the vote was around 60 percent, according to mediation institution Forligsinstitutionen, which released the result of the voting in a press statement.

Employer organisations all voted for the agreement, giving it 100 percent backing on the employers’ side.

The chairperson of the trade union federation FH (Fagbevægelsens Hovedorganisation), Lisette Risgaard, welcomed members’ decision to accept the deal.

“This is a happy day for all parties. I am proud of all our skilled negotiators who under difficult circumstances have achieved results that members have now approved,” she said in a statement.

Collective bargaining agreements in many sectors of the Danish labour market were thrashed out during the late winter and a draft mediation was presented by FH and the employers’ association DA (Dansk Arbejdsgiverforening) on March 22nd, covering areas that lacked an agreement.

Inflation and the government’s decision to scrap the Great Prayer Day holiday were factors that presented challenges in the 2023 negotiations.

Trade unions negotiate with employers’ organisations every few years to develop collective bargaining agreements (overenskomster in Danish) regulating many aspects of Denmark’s labour market, from wages to paid parental leave and pensions. 

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WORKING IN DENMARK

Why are Danish experts recommending closure of all job centres?

Recommendations made by an expert commission to the government on employment and welfare advocate for closure of all municipal job centres.

Why are Danish experts recommending closure of all job centres?

Denmark’s job centres, which are responsible for administration of social welfare benefits for people seeking employment and of facilitating training and work placements under welfare lows, should be closed according to recommendations handed to the government on Monday.

Additionally, over half of the current rules related to unemployment benefits should be scrapped and 9 in 10 sanctions for people who fail to comply with criteria such as attending meetings or applying for a set number of jobs.

Denmark has two broad tiers for those out of work: dagpenge, which provides an income calculated on the person’s tax payments while in employment, and the more basic kontanthjælp.

Dagpenge is available to people who a paying members of a semi-private uninsurance provider called an Arbejdsløshedskasse or A-kasse, while kontanthjælp is available to everyone.

Both groups must comply with legal requirements related to job searching in order to receive the benefits they qualify for – these are administered by municipal job centres.

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When the coalition government took office at the end of 2022 it stated that it wanted to save three billion kroner annually by reforming the municipal unemployment area and improving its efficiency – specifically by targeting job centres.

This has led to an expert group, appointed by the government, making six specific requirements – those announce on Monday.

The government is not obliged to follow the recommendations.

But the expert group says there is much to gain from closing job centres.

“There’s great potential in replacing the current one-size-fits-all system with a new approach where individual needs are in focus,” group chairperson Claus Thustrup Kreiner said in a press statement.

The six broad recommendations are as follows:

  • Fewer target groups and special rules
  • Individual programmes
  • More balanced sanctions system
  • Abolish job centres and introduce free organisation at municipalities
  • Give more influence to A-kasse and private interests
  • Results, not system-based approach

|Source: DR

“Our report includes recommendations for the biggest reform of the jobseeking area ever, and will make the system cheaper, simpler and more dignified without weakening employment,” Kreiner said.

The national confederation for trade unions, Fagbevægelsens Hovedorganisation (FH), criticised the costcutting element of the recommendations in comments to broadcaster DR, and also said it would reduce the options and rights of jobseekers.

“I thought this was about giving unemployed people more freedom to decide what they need,” FH chairperson Nanna Højlund said.

“But the expert group clearly sees it as being about allowing municipalities to do exactly what they want,” she said.

The Confederation of Danish Industry (DI) welcomed the proposals.

“The expert group has proposed a simplification of employment with fewer rules and benefit categories and with a large saving” DI deputy director Steen Nielsen said in a statement.

“That is a good idea because it’s difficult to run a job centre efficiently with the many different criteria and rules that must be met for each of the many categories,” he added.

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