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An Act on support for short-time work, or kurzarbeit in Slovakia entered into force on March 1, 2022. Its main purpose is to provide partial compensation of employer’s costs on employees’ wages in a situation in which the employer can’t assign them work due to external factors. What are the conditions for obtaining the subsidy and who may apply for it?
As the title of the Act states, the subsidy is provided by a state when the employer’s activity is temporarily restricted due to influence of external factors that could not be prejudiced or prevented and which have a negative impact on the assigned work to the employees. Put simply, they are circumstances that force companies to retain their employees at home due to obstacles at work on the employer’s side.
These circumstances are especially extraordinary situation, state of emergency or occurrence of force majeure. However, the Act also mentions that the external factor can’t be a war or a state of war, seasonality of the performed work or planned shutdown.
The Act on kurzarbeit in Slovakia stipulates basic conditions that must be met on both employer and employee sides in order for the employer to apply for the subsidy.
The employer:
The employee:
Yes, the subsidy is limited by the amount and the period during which it is provided. The subsidy is provided in the minimum amount of 60% of the employee’s average hourly earnings in a month for which it applies, up to the EUR 7.8138 per hour. The employer may apply for the subsidy only for 6 months during 2 years. In case when the external factors will last longer, the government can prolong the period.
The application shall be submitted via electronic mailbox at slovensko.sk portal and signed by a qualified electronic signature.
The respective authority will examine the application and if it meets all conditions, it shall take a decision on its approval within 10-day period. Otherwise, it will ask the applicant to supplement the information. In a case when the authority approves the application, it shall pay out the subsidy without a written decision. If the authority denies it, it shall inform the applicant in a written form.
Yes. Pursuant to the related provision of the Labour Code, the employer is obliged to pay the employees compensation for the time of short-time work in the amount of at least 80% of their average earnings. If the employer has entered into an agreement with the employee representatives setting out the operational reasons due to which the employer can’t assign work, because of which they are entitled to a wage compensation of at least 60% of their average earnings, this will not apply for the period for which the employer is applying for short-time subsidy.
Besides, the employer is obliged to preserve a work position for which a subsidy was provided, for at least two months after the end of the calendar month for which the subsidy was provided. This shall not apply to cases when the employment relationship is terminated from employee’s own initiative.