3/19/2006 10:57:35 AM
what a horrible idea... they are just on a mission to fuck up there social structure and want another coup... holy shit.... the exact people who rioted for job security and jobs... are now gonna get less job security and maybe more jobs. and watch all 26 year olds be out of a job at once....
3/19/2006 11:30:19 AM
3/19/2006 11:32:32 AM
What the hell?When most people accept a job, they sign something saying they can be fired at any time for any or no reason. If you don't agree to that, no job in the first place. I've always hated that myself. Am I to understand this is not the way French companies behaved up to this point?
3/19/2006 11:50:31 AM
That's called at will employment: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/At-will_employmentTo me, this sounds like an extended new employee probationary period. I fail to see how this is a "horrible idea" or how it's going to get all the 26 year olds fired.
3/19/2006 12:00:13 PM
Maybe you can't just fire people in France when they fuck up.I don't know.But this just kind of seems discriminatory towards younger people to me.
3/19/2006 12:04:41 PM
^and thats what the riots are abouttheyre all over the universities
3/19/2006 12:42:07 PM
Forgot the link, although I'm sure people could have found it:http://edition.cnn.com/2006/WORLD/europe/03/19/france.job.protest.reut/
3/19/2006 2:13:41 PM
France is filled with too many entitlements. Their labor laws are autrocious. The laws that were meant to protect workers are hurting them... For example, in France, your pay is compulsory by LAW based on your degree. In other words, lets say you dont mind taking a job making 30,000 a year. If you have a masters degree, then french law dictates that an employer pay you 40,000 (even if you dont request it). So, businesses cant afford to high qualified workers for jobs because they cant afford them. I spent a few weeks in France with some french friends. The family I stayed with had 2 daughters. Both with masters degrees. Both were working out of the country (one in Spain and one in the UK) because the employers in the area which had some jobs they wouldnt mind doing for less pay, couldnt afford them because of the law.Almost all the jobs in France are heavily unionized. The workers KNOW they wont get fired, no matter how bad the performance. France is killing itself quickly with this type of environment.The law is a nice start, but as someone mentioned, because employers realize they will have to either terminate employees at 26, or grant them ridiculous employment rights, it will result in either mass layoffs at 26, or no appreciable job number increases.[Edited on March 19, 2006 at 2:48 PM. Reason : .]
3/19/2006 2:29:32 PM
Does this law affect the degree-based pay scales, or any other employment rights? If not, why would there be mass layoffs at 26? Companies still need long term, experienced employees.
3/19/2006 2:48:50 PM
No, I suspect every other labor regulation will remain in place. All that is changing is regs dealing with job termination. For example, this does not exempt them from minimum wage laws (such as mentioned above).
3/19/2006 3:00:42 PM
id actually engage in this discussion if i didnt already know that everyone here wants unions to be abolished
3/19/2006 4:44:18 PM
I have nothing against a voluntary association, whatever you call it. As long as it is purely voluntary, for all parties, then I love unions and see a bright future for them. So, I guess that means I'm with you! I would never abolish unions!Unless you believe unions could not exist without coersive state power, then I'm not with you. [Edited on March 19, 2006 at 6:27 PM. Reason : .,.]
3/19/2006 6:26:53 PM
the workers think they are entitled to a job, which is bullshit. socialism at its finest
3/19/2006 7:30:44 PM
if it is that hard to get rid of somebody and they have mandated pay, no wonder unemployment is high. I'd be reluctant to hire people, too. In America we have to assume risk when we take a job, but it looks as if the prospects for making a living here are much better.
3/19/2006 7:34:58 PM
3/19/2006 8:28:42 PM
I meant to say better off.
3/19/2006 10:33:59 PM
and we burn a lot of money on wars
3/20/2006 2:53:02 AM
3/20/2006 7:05:47 AM
Quite true. But like the French say, such benefits are not included in the economic data, only their costs.It bears mentioning that when American's live in dense cities we don't cram into hamster cages like Europeans. Our cities are way over-built for the given population by European standards. Per-capita living-space downtown is, on average, almost twice that of our French counter-parts. New York is an obvious exception due to the ravages of Rent Control. [Edited on March 20, 2006 at 9:52 AM. Reason : aperment]
3/20/2006 9:42:29 AM