France Travail (English: France Work), previously Pôle emploi (in French pronounced as /pol ɑ̃plwa/; English: employment centre), is a French governmental agency which registers unemployed people, helps them find jobs and provides them with financial aid. The agency was created in 2008, resulting from the merger between the ANPE and the ASSEDIC (or Assédic). The agency employs 45,000 civil servants. The merger had been expected for a very long time,[1] for the two agencies had been created more than forty years before.
The ASSEDIC (Association pour l'emploi dans l'industrie et le commerce) was created in 1958 to provide social benefits to unemployed people. The ANPE (Agence Nationale Pour l’Emploi) was created in 1967.
In December 2007, Christine Lagarde, Minister of the Economy, unveiled the law to the government.[2]
On February 13, 2008, the law implementing the fusion was officially voted on.[3] Pôle Emploi has existed legally since 19 December 2008.
On December 18, 2023, it has been renamed to France Travail. The name change was effective on January 1, 2024.[4]
Since then, France Travail has a single phone number (39.49) to get information on registration and benefits. There is also a single web page (pole-emploi.fr, now redirected to francetravail.fr). The ANPE and Assedic logos have disappeared from every branch.
However, the Unedic (or Unédic) remained in existence, but it became an independent agency managed by the "social partners" (trade unions and company representatives).
The merger was an electoral pledge of candidate Nicolas Sarkozy during the French presidential election of 2007.
The merger was part of the pledge to cut the unemployment rate to 5% by 2012.[5] It also aimed at improving the efficiency of public services provided to unemployed people.[6]
Agents of both ANPE and Assedic had to adapt to the fusion: 30,000 out of 45,000 agents had to follow a one-year training course.[7]
The missions the agency is entrusted with are ANPE and Assedic's missions combined. France Travail receives those that have declared unemployment. It provides them with social benefits. The agency provides advice and supervises job hunting, as well as providing a platform to help companies find and hire workers.[8]
Once a candidate is enrolled into France Travail each person is appointed a personal adviser who: helps them with their job searches, orients candidates toward additional training and guides their eventual integration back into the work force. Whereas there were around 60 unemployed advised by one ANPE agents, there now around 30 unemployed for each Pole emploi agent.[5]
The agency also helps companies to find candidates for a job. They publish job offers, select themselves candidates and follow their first months in the job. They develop partnerships with companies to advise them.
The agency focuses on people notably affected by long-term unemployment, young people, seniors, and RSA-beneficiaries (state funded welfare).
France Travail collects workers' contributions to finance unemployment benefits, paid by salaries. However, the government of François Fillon said this mission would be entrusted to the URSSAF.
Pole Emploi publish monthly statistics of job-seekers. It takes into account only people registered with Pole Emploi, and distinguishes between various categories of job-seekers.[9]
Before 2009, the unemployment was measured by the ANPE with 8 categories:
With the new system, Pole Emploi uses 5 categories:
The concept of job seekers registered at Pole Emploi is different from that of uses by the ILO: some registered job-seekers are not unemployed according to the ILO and conversely some unemployed according to the ILO definition are not registered to Pole Emploi. Data on unemployed people are based on administrative records in center jobs. The statistics are legal rules: the Pole Emploi centers can accept people according to their availability and their activity.
According to the ILO definition, an unemployed person is a person of working age (i.e. aged 15 years or older) who does not work, not even one hour during the week, who is available to take a job within 15 days and who actively sought a job in the previous month. In each country, a statistical survey is conducted to check whether these criteria are met. In France, the INSEE is the body responsible for this survey, it publishes it every three months, while Pole Emploi delivers monthly statistics.[10] There are always more people registered by Pole Emploi than people officially recognized as unemployed by the ILO.