Unemployment benefits in France explained

Unemployment insurance in France was first established in 1958. Benefits and contributions are set by the independent body called UNEDIC which is controlled equally by Trade Unions and Employer associations. Unemployment benefits are paid only to those persons who fulfill certain requirements.[1]

History

Unemployment insurance was established by Charles de Gaulle on 31 December 1958 and initially applied only to employees of the commerce sector. From the start the employers organization CNPF and the trade unions FO, CFTC and CGC signed up to the new system. The system was not initially part of the French Social Security system and caused one main union the CGT to not sign the accord. The system did not include any structure to help those unemployed to find work. Thus in 1967 the ANPE was created.

In the 1980s the rapid rise of unemployment brought the Unedic to the brink of collapse as the employer organisations refused to endorse an increase in contributions in order to balance the accounts of Unedic. Finally employer organisations and the unions agreed to reduce benefits and make them dependent on the length of contributions.

Since 1984 the state takes over from Unedic once a worker has used up his/her benefits. Beneficiaries receive the RMI (Minimum subsistence revenue).

In 1992 the system again fell into deficit and the partners decided to increase the required contribution period together with reductions for the long term unemployed. In 2001 the reductions were abandoned in favour of incentives to employ the long term unemployed (PARE) but the reduced contributions and rising unemployment bring the system into deficit again and the partners were again forced to revise the system reducing the length of benefits from 30 months to 23. The reduction leaves only half of the unemployed getting benefits from Unedic.

In 2005 Employment and Cohesion minister Jean-Louis Borloo introduced the social cohesion law which formally abolished the Agence nationale pour l'emploi (National employment agency) monopoly on employment placement. The act created 300 Maison de l´emploi (employment houses) housing all agencies responsible for helping the unemployed. In 2006 an accord again tightened requirements for claimants at the same time as introducing the single office principle and the monthly counselling of claimants. As of December 2008 the ANPE and Assedic were merging into the newly created Pôle emploi.[2] [3]

Management of unemployment insurance

The partners (unions and employee organisations) meet every three years and agree on a new accord which primarily sets out the contributions assigned to the unemployment insurance scheme and the benefits to be paid to claimants for the next 3 years. Once the partners agree the government must pass an act of parliament to give it the force of law.

Although managed independently from the state the schemes revenues and costs are considered to be part of public revenue and expenditure and hence any borrowing required to finance the system is guaranteed by the state.

The Unedic accords

The first 20 years after its creation the scheme had no financial difficulties. During the 1970s increased unemployment pushed the scheme into deficit. In 2000 with the scheme showing a healthy surplus of 1.3 billion euros, the partners signed an accord which forecasts an 18 billion euro surplus over the following 3 years and consequently agree on a reduction in contributions in order to bring the scheme into equilibrium. A court decision in 2004 reinstated some benefits and called into question the financial plan of the scheme. In 2007 the Court of Appeal (Cour de Cassation) struck down the lower courts decision.The current accord was signed in February 2009 and sets out the following conditions for receiving unemployment benefits.

Requirements to receive unemployment benefits

Under the 2009 accord the following requirements must be met,

Benefits duration

Benefits are payable for the same duration as the contributions but may not exceed 730[4] days. Minimum period is 122 days. Claimants over 50 may receive benefits for up to 1095 days.

Finances

Beneficiaries of unemployment benefit

Financial results (millions d'euros)! Year! Income! Expenses! Annual surplus/(deficit)! Debt position
align=center 1985 align=center 7.614 align=center 7.829 align=center - 0.214 align=center xxx
align=center 1986 align=center 8.753 align=center 8.350 align=center + 0.403 align=center xxx
align=center 1987 align=center 9.195 align=center 9.248 align=center - 0.054 align=center xxx
align=center 1988 align=center 10.295 align=center 10.059 align=center + 0.237 align=center xxx
align=center 1989 align=center 11.601 align=center 10.858 align=center + 0.743 align=center xxx
align=center 1990 align=center 12.703 align=center 12.153 align=center + 0.550 align=center xxx
align=center 1991 align=center 13.108 align=center 14.340 align=center - 1.231 align=center xxx
align=center 1992 align=center 14.764 align=center 16.984 align=center - 2.310 align=center xxx
align=center 1993 align=center 17.829 align=center 19.169 align=center - 1.341 align=center xxx
align=center 1994 align=center 20.268 align=center 18.942 align=center + 1.326 align=center xxx
align=center 1995 align=center 20.936 align=center 17.521 align=center + 3.415 align=center xxx
align=center 1996 align=center 20.462 align=center 18.892 align=center + 1.570 align=center xxx
align=center 1997 align=center 19.629 align=center 19.957 align=center - 0.328 align=center xxx
align=center 1998 align=center 20.549 align=center 20.867 align=center - 0.318 align=center xxx
align=center 1999 align=center 21.332 align=center 21.748 align=center - 0.416 align=center xxx
align=center 2000 align=center 22.776 align=center 21.444 align=center + 1.332 align=center +2.965
align=center 2001 align=center 22.723 align=center 22.476 align=center + 0.247 align=center +2.144
align=center 2002 align=center 22.559 align=center 26.279 align=center - 3.720 align=center -1.554
align=center 2003 align=center 25.784 align=center 30.067 align=center - 4.282 align=center -5.836
align=center 2004 align=center 26.732 align=center 31.152 align=center - 4.420 align=center -10.260
align=center 2005 align=center 27.695 align=center 30.887 align=center - 3.192 align=center -13.452
align=center 2006 align=center 29.394 align=center 29.050 align=center + 0.344 align=center -13.108
align=center 2008 align=center 30.5 align=center 25.9 align=center + 4.59 align=center -4.99
align=center 2009 align=center 30.9 align=center 31.9 align=center - 1.16 align=center -5.59
align=center 2010 align=center 30.8 align=center 34.0 align=center - 3.25 align=center -8.9
align=center 2011 align=center 32.7 align=center 33.9 align=center - 1.25align=center -11
align=center 2012 align=center 33.2 align=center 35.8 align=center - 2.57 align=center -13.9
[5]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The reform of France's unemployment benefits scheme. World Socialist Web Site. 23 June 2012. Marianne Arens and Françoise Thull. 13 December 2000.
  2. Web site: France plans to tighten rules on unemployment compensation. The New York Times. 23 June 2012. Katrin Bennhold. 2008-04-14.
  3. Web site: French social security system explained. Paris Voice. 23 June 2012. David Hampshire.
  4. Web site: The French social security system - Unemployment insurance. www.cleiss.fr.
  5. Web site: 2010 Financial Report. Unédic. 23 June 2012.