Eurofound's ERM database on restructuring-related legal regulations provides
information on regulations in the Member States of the European Union and Norway
which are explicitly or implicitly linked to anticipating and managing change.
Slovenia: Time off for job search
Phase
Employment Relationship Act (ZDR-1)
Native name
Zakon o delovnih razmerjih (ZDR-1)
Type
Time off for job search
Added to database
08 May 2015
Article
97
Description
If the employer gives notice of cancellation of the employment contract, the worker shall be entitled to absence from work during the period of notice to search for new employment and to wage compensation for a minimum of two hours per week.
In the event of termination of the employment contract for business reasons, an employer who does not offer the worker a new employment contract for another job and informs the employment service of the cancellation of the employment contract must allow the worker to be absent from work for at least one day per week to integrate into activities in the labour market in accordance with existing labour market regulations.
The employer shall be obliged to pay wage compensation for the time of absence from work for job search in the amount of 70% of the average monthly wage for full-time work during the past three months.
Commentary
The employer has the right to reimbursement of wage compensation from the employment service for the time the worker is absent from work that enables the worker to participate in active labour market programmes. The worker indirectly carries the costs because the period in which the worker receives unemployment benefits is proportionally shorter for his time off from work.
Recent studies on the deployment of active labour market reforms have omitted data on how much time redundant people spend looking for work during their notice period. They neither provided data on employers who demanded wage compensation for time away from work for job searching. The low take-up rate is primarily due to exceptional circumstances during the COVID-19 pandemic. On the one hand, companies might keep jobs through temporary layoffs and a short-time support system. On the other hand, there were fewer active labour market activities until March 2022 due to physical distance constraints, and, subsequently, the end of activities sponsored by the European Cohesion Fund (MDDSZ, 2023).
Additional metadata
Cost covered by
National government
Involved actors other than national government
Public employment service
Involvement (others)
None
Thresholds
Affected employees: No, applicable in all circumstances Company size: No, applicable in all circumstances Additional information: No, applicable in all circumstances
Sources
Kresal, B. (2008), National background paper Slovenia, Anticipating and managing restructuring in enterprises: 27 national seminars, ARENAS Report, European Commission, Brussels
Eurofound (2015), Slovenia: Time off for job search, Restructuring legislation database, Dublin,
https://apps.eurofound.europa.eu/legislationdb/time-off-for-job-search/slovenia
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