Rhineland Palatinate
-
main target groups
-
long-term unemployed, recipients of social assistance, older unemployed persons and young people who are hard to place
-
workers threatened by dismissal
-
development of early warning systems
-
“what-to-do” guidelines in a company crisis
-
promotion for the creation of labour policy safety structures
-
use of outplacement counsellors.
-
in the past ten years: approx. 200 active organisations of labour market policy measures (annual volume of approx. 50 million € from Land and ESF funds)
-
set of instruments from counselling and training over vocational guidance to the actual placement into employment on the regular labour market.
-
labour market-relevant research and employment-securing support measures for companies
-
state programme „Work has to pay off – supplementary child benefit to avoid reliance on social assistance“
-
„Mainz model“
-
establishment of service agencies
Saarland
-
Sub-goals and promotion priorities:
-
Promoting equal opportunities of men and women
-
increasing the percentage of women in gainful employment
-
facilitating their return into employment
-
improving the occupational opportunities of women on the labour market
-
equal participation of women in labour market policy measures
-
facilitating the compatibility of family and employment
-
Combating long-term unemployment
-
increased use of preventive measures to avoid long-term unemployment
-
provide additional occupational qualification measures as well as employment
-
Combating youth unemployment
-
providing additional occupational qualification measures as well as employment
-
developing modular, gradual measures
-
reducing the percentage of unskilled young adults
-
reducing the percentage of young people without a degree of secondary general education
-
Promoting initial vocational training:
-
especially for low-performing young people
-
Promoting integration into the labour market:
-
development and improvement of basic vocational training measures tied with employment
-
measures on skills that can be used on the primary labour market.
-
expanding structures of employment-promoting regional and local counselling, placement and acquisition.
-
Promotion of occupational re-orientation:
-
expanding occupational re-orientation offers for those workers who are in risk or who are losing their job due to structural changes due to structural changes of the economy
-
Adjustment of occupational qualification:
-
improved measures to adjust skills to the technical and organisational changes and the changes of production systems
Saxony
-
Saxony’s labour market policy focuses on:
-
Human capital investment
-
Improving the entrepreneurial environment by promoting skills of entrepreneurial thinking and acting
-
Reducing long-term unemployment by strengthening growth factors and by focussed use of labour market policy instruments, especially for qualification and promotion of disadvantaged groups,
-
Offering integration measures for the long-term unemployed through activities outside of traditional gainful employment.
-
Reforming social security systems
-
Rendering working hours more flexible
-
Integrating elements of civic responsibility.
-
less interventionist reactive promotion
-
focus on transition into the primary labour market (e.g. specific training opportunities targeted at company needs)
-
As far as promotion funded by the ESF and the local employment offices is concerned, unemployed persons or those threatened by unemployment shall continue to be supported pursuant to the regulations of the ESF and the Law to Promote Employment
-
Wage cost subsidies for companies used mainly to reinsert people who are particularly disadvantaged onto the labour market as well as business start-ups
-
Saxony also participates in pilot projects for the employment of low-skilled workers
-
Strategic priorities of the promotion policy T’AURIS project’:
-
Attracting additional competitive companies (settlements, business start-ups)
-
Maintaining the competitiveness of the existing companies
-
Qualification, creating an environment for the creation, multiplication and economic use of knowledge
-
Creating an efficient infrastructure
-
Using the specific regional potentials
Saxony Anhalt
-
large part of the budget is spent on initial vocational training, the qualification of workers, into counselling for companies on matters of personnel and organisational development and into job rotation (preventive approach)
-
principle of financing employment instead of unemployment
-
increase in labour market opportunities for women
-
measures shall also contribute to the Land’s structural development
-
older workers: programme „Actively into Retirement“
-
four aims:
-
increasing and improving the availability of jobs
-
improving the integration opportunities of special groups
-
redistribution of labour
-
improving the infrastructure
Schleswig Holstein
-
activities taking into account the principle of promoting and demanding
-
With the funds from the European Social Fund, Schleswig Holstein will use approx. 260 million € for these means until the end of 2006
-
concept for the state’s structural development “Our Aim: A Future in our own Region” (initiated in 2000 with a duration until the end of 2006)
-
bundles resources from national and European sources for securing jobs and creating new jobs, promoting general and vocational education in the sense of lifelong learning and creating equal opportunities
-
sub programme „Employment for Schleswig Holstein 2000 (ASH 2000)“ (Land’s list of objectives)
-
closely follows the EES principles and especially the ESF prerequisites for promotion
-
“Elmshorn Model” (now called Personnel-Service-Agency/PSA):
-
new employment possibilities in the low-wage sector
-
innovatively links job acquisition with skills tailored to the respective needs and (if necessary) grants for the social insurance contributions
-
„Employment for Schleswig Holstein“ (regional action programme) provides the institutional framework for tripartite co-operation.
-
The Land participates in the continuing development of the national Law to Promote Employment
-
pushed that job rotation be included into the regulations of the Social Law Compendium IIII
Thuringia
-
creating additional training places through the „Thuringia Training Initiative“
-
continuing development of ESF programmes to combat youth unemployment (projects like „Job Access in Thuringia” (JET) will be continued)
-
measures to improve the management and co-ordination of training programmes within the framework of the training offensive
-
promoting in-service training of workers and business owners
-
measures to reactivate unemployed skilled workers, e.g. by continuing the “Second Career” programme
-
pilot project for tailor-made training of workers and unemployed persons (QualiPass Thuringia)
-
promoting business start-ups and entrepreneurship
-
continuing labour market policy programmes for young people, women, the long-term unemployed and older people (e.g. “Work instead of Social Assistance”, „50-plus“ and „unemployed and hard-to-place“)
-
promoting structural adjustment measures (e.g. improving the content of the measures has been achieved by introducing quality criteria as a yardstick)
-
bringing labour market policy to the regions, drafting and implementing regional development and promotion concepts
Nevertheless, the main separating line lies between western and eastern German countries with huge differences in employment and unemployment rates, but also in the need for structural adaptation and change.
As far as the overall governance of employment policies is concerned, more or less the same type of structures apply in the different Länder, as e.g. the Employment Service is a Federal agency and regional alliances for work were structured after the example of the national Alliance for Jobs. Nevertheless, esp. the integration of social partners varies. Moreover, the Federal Employment Service as well as unemployment and social benefit are co-financed by the Länder at the regional and local level. Thus, the Länder partly set up programmes on ‘Work instead of social benefit’ in order to minimizes expenditure in this area.
The most important actors involved at the Länder level are the ministries for labour and social affairs, the ministries for economy and education, local authorities and the employment services.
Regional data on employment policies
Supply data that documents employment policies: concentrate on expenditure and the number of participants affected by these policies, but also report other relevant information that bears on cohesion.
(Note that, in addition to national sources, useful summary information can be found in OECD, ‘Employment Outlook’ and European Commission, Employment and social affairs, ‘Employment policies in the EU and in Member States’ for national data).
Public expenditure of the Federal Employment Service (in 1000 €)686
|
Baden-Württemberg
|
Bayern
|
Berlin
|
Brandenburg
|
Bremen
|
Hamburg
|
Hessen
|
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
|
Niedersachsen
|
Nordrhein-Westfalen
|
Rheinland-Pfalz
|
Saarland
|
Sachsen
|
Sachsen-Anhalt
|
Schleswig-Holstein
|
Thüringen
|
Public employment services (2002)
|
4.757.212
|
6.392.711
|
3.281.299
|
3.172.460
|
539.506
|
1.075.271
|
3.085.652
|
2.362.119
|
4.533.744
|
10.247.968
|
1.967.644
|
588.552
|
5.313.406
|
3.536.816
|
1.798.227
|
2.917.971
|
Of which are earmarked for:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Labour market training (training for employed adults)
|
198.268
|
263.867
|
471.916
|
211.762
|
36.814
|
68.273
|
159.202
|
163.151
|
264.584
|
590.282
|
112.633
|
37.560
|
294.484
|
289.153
|
99.796
|
214.660
|
Youth measures (unemployed youth; apprenticeships and related forms)
|
150.716
|
217.930
|
206.838
|
300.109
|
329.212
|
49.826
|
136.004
|
243.673
|
232.027
|
506.938
|
96.244
|
32.525
|
434.688
|
240.611
|
106.151
|
219.976
|
Subsidised employment (subsidies to regular employment; support for unemployed starting enterprises; direct job creation)
|
222.056
|
309.799
|
916.950
|
399.425
|
57.071
|
113.169
|
277.937
|
342.859
|
602.555
|
635.632
|
745.956
|
42.575
|
891.567
|
593.266
|
119.181
|
377.990
|
Measures for the disabled (2002)
|
389.128
|
437.119
|
554.081
|
128.298
|
29.689
|
52.328
|
185.815
|
86.208
|
271.149
|
612.405
|
153.653
|
43.526
|
187.495
|
161.438
|
26.502
|
141.190
|
Unemployment compensation
|
4.520.962
|
4.514.447
|
2.770.652
|
2.349.865
|
465.723
|
842.792
|
2.303.821
|
1.712.912
|
3.530.933
|
8.286.073
|
1.463.395
|
436.939
|
3.967.562
|
3.735.069
|
1.307.552
|
1.995.224
|
Support for employment creating infrastructure
|
1.931
|
35.663
|
52.331
|
132.799
|
5.022
|
9.272
|
11.163
|
92.731
|
24.812
|
8.820
|
5.745
|
2.738
|
108.786
|
186.599
|
6.693
|
26.881
|
ESF
|
16.680
|
19.754
|
10.991
|
16.646
|
5.496
|
7.366
|
12.007
|
17.424
|
21.328
|
52.652
|
10.641
|
5.164
|
28.480
|
25.293
|
6.620
|
21.695
|
Number of participants affected687
|
Baden-Württemberg
|
Bayern
|
Berlin
|
Brandenburg
|
Bremen
|
Hamburg
|
Hessen
|
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
|
Niedersachsen
|
Nordrhein-Westfalen
|
Rheinland-Pfalz
|
Saarland
|
Sachsen
|
Sachsen-Anhalt
|
Schleswig-Holstein
|
Thüringen
|
Labour market training (training for unemployed adults; training for employed adults) (entrance 2002)688
|
21.293
|
33.610
|
30.666
|
28.351
|
5.419
|
11.385
|
22.595
|
26.679
|
40.746
|
79.200
|
17.382
|
5.782
|
43.514
|
39.112
|
14.676
|
29.891
|
Subsidised employment (subsidies to regular employment; support for unemployed starting enterprises; direct job creation) (Dec. 2002)689
|
1.920
|
2.883
|
11.217
|
11.680
|
1.471
|
1.572
|
1.878
|
10.614
|
5.160
|
11.125
|
1.501
|
617
|
27.586
|
15.249
|
1.479
|
10.347
|
Measures for the disabled690
|
11.716
|
16.910
|
3.748
|
3.767
|
1.206
|
2.674
|
5.810
|
3.296
|
10.086
|
23.393
|
5.440
|
1.451
|
6.990
|
3.861
|
3.281
|
3.578
|
Unemployment compensation (Dez. 2002)a
|
296.436
|
392.975
|
250.393
|
233.822
|
43.620
|
72.752
|
198.207
|
182.993
|
327.222
|
728.176
|
133.627
|
41.268
|
389.189
|
257.314
|
119.975
|
201.402
|
a incl. unemployment benefit, reintegration support and pension transition subsidies
Regional differences in paid weekly working hours (h) 2002691
|
All
|
Male
|
Female
|
Germany
|
37,9
|
38,0
|
37,2
|
Baden-Württemberg
|
37,5
|
37,7
|
36,8
|
Bayern
|
37,3
|
37,5
|
36,4
|
Berlin
|
37,5
|
37,7
|
36,6
|
Brandenburg
|
39,3
|
39,4
|
39,2
|
Bremen
|
36,8
|
36,7
|
37,1
|
Hamburg
|
37,5
|
37,5
|
37,1
|
Hessen
|
37,6
|
37,7
|
37,1
|
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern
|
39,6
|
39,6
|
39,2
|
Niedersachsen
|
37,2
|
37,3
|
36,6
|
Nordrhein-Westfalen
|
38,1
|
38,2
|
36,9
|
Rheinland-Pfalz
|
37,8
|
37,9
|
37,2
|
Saarland
|
38,0
|
38,2
|
37,0
|
Sachsen
|
39,5
|
39,6
|
39,2
|
Sachsen-Anhalt
|
39,9
|
39,9
|
39,7
|
Schleswig-Holstein
|
38,0
|
38,0
|
37,5
|
Thüringen
|
39,7
|
39,8
|
39,3
|
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