Take this job and shove it, monsieur!
![Paul in Cannon Beach](http://blr-hrforums.elasticbeanstalk.com/plugins/DefaultAvatars/design/LBlueAvatar.jpg)
French police donned riot gear and fired tear gas into angry crowds of students at the Sorbonne University on Saturday.
The French students were protesting a new employment plan that has caused Prime Minister Villepin's popularity to tumble.
Apparently this employment plan or contract would allow employers to hire people under age 26 for a two year trial period before offering them a permanent position.
While the Prime minister and other supporters of the plan say it was designed to encourage companies to hire younger workers, critics say it will just make it easier to fire younger workers which will just increase feelings of insecurity.
I wonder what "permanent" employment means in France? It looks like this plan creates a two year "at will" window allowing ee's to be terminated without cause.
Apparently this plan is part of an "emergency employment strategy" aimed at reducing France's climbing unemployment rate. Apparently 42 percent of French youth leaving secondary school without "special skills" are unemployed.
The French students were protesting a new employment plan that has caused Prime Minister Villepin's popularity to tumble.
Apparently this employment plan or contract would allow employers to hire people under age 26 for a two year trial period before offering them a permanent position.
While the Prime minister and other supporters of the plan say it was designed to encourage companies to hire younger workers, critics say it will just make it easier to fire younger workers which will just increase feelings of insecurity.
I wonder what "permanent" employment means in France? It looks like this plan creates a two year "at will" window allowing ee's to be terminated without cause.
Apparently this plan is part of an "emergency employment strategy" aimed at reducing France's climbing unemployment rate. Apparently 42 percent of French youth leaving secondary school without "special skills" are unemployed.
Comments
Maybe that's why the current younger work force in France isn't working......all the veterans are still in their jobs cause the employer can't get them out!
Apparently since 2000, the official French work week is 35 hours.
Vacation benefits are generous as well with employees earning an average of four weeks off annually.
Are there any Francophiles in our midst? I know it's not a popular thing to admit these days.
Zut alor - "darn it" An outdated French phrase but the short version "Zut!" is still in use.
The irony of course is that the new law was designed to encourage employers to hire younger workers.
No wonder they dislike most things American.
Good one Larry!
xclap
The youth were afraid that give up the very protections that were keeping many of them unemployed.
Pretty short sighted if you think about it. Villepin blamed the failure of this reform on a lack of "trust" between employers and workers.
Imagine the frustration of practicing HR in a culture where you essentially can't terminate employees and the employees know it.
If any of you work for the US Postal Service you dont have to imagine that hard...
The attempts to tinker with the employment laws were in direct response to the earlier riots where so many immigrants and young were rioting because there were no jobs.