COVID-19

Coronavirus: A labour market earthquake

It is less than four weeks since the first large European Coronavirus-related company bankruptcy (Flybe, a British regional airline, on 5 March), but it is clear already that the pandemic is going to disrupt labour markets as seriously as the global financial crisis, if not more so.

A large majority of large-scale restructuring reported in the European Restructuring Monitor (ERM) in recent weeks have cited the Coronavirus outbreak as the proximate cause of announced job losses. Though as yet a small sample (22 cases – see a selection in the table below), there are some indications already of the sectors most exposed to the effects of the pandemic.

Activity has contracted dramatically in the commercial aviation sector as most freedoms of movement have been curtailed in order to limit transmission of the virus. In addition to the Flybe collapse – which will result in 2,000 direct job losses throughout the UK – significant job losses have been announced by airlines KLM and airBaltic in recent weeks, as well as at many airports, including Budapest Airport (by Malév GH) in Hungary, and Gatwick and Edinburgh Airports in the UK. Not only air travel has been affected. Stena Line, the ferry operator, has announced 950 job losses in its Swedish operations due to the anticipated impacts of COVID-19 on summer season sailings.

Leisure and tourism have been hit for similar reasons. The northern European gym-operator Actic has announced 900 job losses across its 131 Swedish outlets due to reduced footfall. Hotel groups Meliá (Spain), Nordic Choice Hotels (Sweden) and Scandic (Sweden) have announced over 6,000 job losses between them as bookings are cancelled and summer demand has collapsed.

The first large-scale manufacturing job losses have been in the auto sector. Over 400 jobs are to go at the big Ford plant near Valencia. Negotiations with the union on these job losses had to be deferred when the plant was forced to close down after three workers tested positive for the Coronavirus.

Selected recent ERM restructuring cases related to the COVID-19 pandemic

Date (2020)

Company

Country

Sector

Announced job loss (min)

30 March

Decodum

Slovakia

Manufacturing

903

30 March

Getjet Airlines

Lithuania

Transportation and storage

370

21 March

Magyar Suzuki

Hungary

Manufacturing

600

19 March

Actic Group

Sweden

Arts and entertainment

900

18 March

Nordic Choice Hotels

Sweden

Hotel and restaurants

4,500

18 March

Háda-1

Hungary

Retail

400

18 March

Borgers CS

Czechia

Manufacturing

400

16 March

Stena Line

Sweden

Transportation and storage

950

14 March

KLM

EU

Transportation and storage

1,500

12 March

Meliá

Spain

Hotels and restaurants

230

12 March

Scandic

Sweden

Hotels and restaurants

2,000

11 March

airBaltic

Latvia

Transportation and storage

400

05 March

Flybe

UK

Transportation and storage

2,000

03 March

Ford

Spain

Manufacturing

400

Of course, the 16,000-odd announced job losses so far explicitly attributed to the COVID-19 outbreak represent a tiny proportion of the disruption that the crisis will inevitably cause in Europe. And the impacts are bound to be felt across all sectors rather than being concentrated in just a few particularly vulnerable areas.

Thus far, temporary lay-offs and short-time working have been the principal recourse of firms in dealing with the pandemic in its early stages – and not terminations, as covered by the ERM’s restructuring database. Temporary lay-offs crucially preserve the employment relationship and facilitate resumption of activity when the crisis abates. There are significant time-limited state supports in many Member States to assist companies and workers in this way. And most governments are extending existing short-time working schemes [1] to deal with this crisis, having learnt lessons on how such schemes operate best from the global financial crisis just over a decade ago. The social partners at Austrian Airlines, for example, have speedily agreed short-time working arrangements for 7,000 employees as planes are grounded.[2] Other initiatives can also help, such as temporary employee transfers from more affected to less affected sectors. Over 500 staff from Nordic Choice Hotels have been temporarily assigned to work with PostNord, a Scandinavian postal operator.

How severe the impacts of the current crisis will be can be gauged from German Federal Labour Office predictions that nearly one million more workers will be accessing short-time working benefits ( Kurzarbeitgeld) in the coming period than during 2008–2009 (2.35 million compared with 1.4 million). [3] Workers and companies will need all the help they can get in the coming months if the potential long-term social and economic damage of this pandemic is to be contained. But one key message from the last crisis for this one is that countries that had well-resourced and well-functioning short-time working schemes were the same countries where unemployment rates rose least.


References

  1. ^ Eurofound (undated), Restructuring support instruments , Short-time working, EMCC.
  2. ^ AviationNetOnline (2020), Kurzarbeit bei Austrian Airlines auf Schiene , 23 March.
  3. ^ Financial Times (2020), Kurzarbeit: A German export most of Europe wants to buy , [behind paywall], 23 March.


 

Forskning udført forud for Det Forenede Kongeriges udtræden af Den Europæiske Union den 31. januar 2020 og offentliggjort efterfølgende kan omfatte data vedrørende de 28 EU-medlemsstater. Efter denne dato tager forskningen kun højde for de 27 EU-medlemsstater (EU-28 minus Det Forenede Kongerige), medmindre andet anføres.

Useful? Interesting? Tell us what you think. Hide comments

Eurofound welcomes feedback and updates on this regulation

Tilføj kommentar