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‘Tinder for jobs’: EU’s new job scheme for non-EU workers moves step closer

The creation of a common EU Talent Pool platform, in which non-EU nationals can register their profiles and find jobs across the 27 member states, has moved a step closer to reality.

'Tinder for jobs': EU's new job scheme for non-EU workers moves step closer
EU Council agrees position on new ‘Tinder for jobs’ scheme for non-EU workers . Photo: GEOFFROY VAN DER HASSELT / AFP

At a meeting of the Justice and Home Affairs Council in Luxembourg, the EU Council, which includes representatives of each of the 27 member states, agreed a joint position on the proposal, referred to as “Tinder for jobs” by EU Home Affairs Commissioner Ylva Johansson. 

The Council will now begin negotiating with the European Parliament to agree on the final legislative text on the proposal, which is part of the EU’s broader skills and talent mobility package. 

What’s the scheme?

“This will not replace anything but it will be an additional tool to make recruitment from outside the EU easier,” Johannes Kleis, a press officer at the European Council, told The Local. “It should help to overcome some barriers that employers might find if they look for staff outside the EU, and this portal will be an easier entry point for third country jobseekers.” 

In a press release announcing the agreement, the Council said it hoped to reconcile principles of fair recruitment with a secure and comprehensive migration system while also “reinforcing the position of the European Union in the global race for talent”. 

READ ALSO: The new scheme to help non-EU nationals find jobs in Europe

The EU’s Home Affairs Commission Ylva Johansson hsa described the Talent Portal as ‘Tinder for jobs’. Photo: Simon Wohlfahrt/AFP

The idea is to set up an EU-wide online platform where jobseekers from outside the EU can set up profiles detailing their skills, qualifications, work experience and which languages they speak. Employers from all participating member states will then be able to post up jobs to the platform. 

Only job vacancies involving skills or professions where member states or the EU as a whole have declared a labour shortage will be listed on the platform. 

The Talent Pool will be designed to help EU employers overcoming some of the challenges of recruiting internationally by helping ensure the “accuracy, quality and comparability” of the foreign applicants’ qualifications and skills. It will also help applicants overcome some of their current difficulties in “accessing and understanding information about recruitment processes” as well as reducing costs. 

The Talent Pool is not intended to set up a common work permit system, with anyone who gets a job through the platform still having to apply for a regular work permit in the country where they find a job. 

The Council has added several new proposals to the system put forward by the European Commission in November, setting up a withdrawal procedure through which member states can leave the Talent Pool after giving six month’s notice.

The Council also wants to empower member states to be able to decide whether individual employers can post up vacancies, whether private employment agencies can do so, or whether only state-run national employment agencies can do so.   

What happens next?

“We’re at the beginning,” Kleis said. “The European Parliament and the Council will now have to sit together to agree on the legal text, and that will happen after the summer. From the Council side, this is the first step but the legislation has yet to be agreed on. So there a lot more hoops to jump through.”  

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WORK PERMITS

Sweden’s Migration Agency celebrates cutting waiting times for work permits

Swedish waiting times for work permits have gone down drastically since a new processing system was implemented, according to the Migration Agency.

Sweden's Migration Agency celebrates cutting waiting times for work permits

The new system, which aims to speed up waiting times for highly qualified workers, was introduced in January, and the Migration Agency said it had so far achieved its purpose.

“We are happy that the efforts have had an effect and that we can offer a service and method that contributes to strengthening Sweden’s competitiveness,” said Migration Agency director-general Maria Mindhammar in a statement on Thursday.

The Local reported last month that 95 percent of complete work permit applications sent in by highly qualified workers – i.e. applications processed within the top priority “A” category – since the launch of the new system were given a decision within the 30-day target.

The Migration Agency has now revealed another set of figures showing that average waiting times for highly qualified workers, EU Blue Card holders, researchers and ICT (Intra-Corporate Transfer) workers were below 30 days in the past four months. Figures in the table below refer to number of days waited.

For other types of permits, the goal is to make a decision within four months.

According to the Migration Agency, the average processing time for complete applications that don’t either fall into the highly-qualified category or industries that require in-depth investigation (i.e. industries where there's a risk of exploitation or abuse of rules – such as the restaurant, construction or cleaning industries), was brought down to 35 days in February-May.

It said about half of cases in this group were submitted complete.

“We really want to increase the percentage of cases that are complete from the start, even when it comes to applications that are not covered by the investment in highly qualified professions,” said Migration Agency deputy regional director Ulrika Ekebjär.

The agency didn't immediately say what the waiting time was for applications in this category that were not complete.

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