FSB criticises EU Green Paper on labour law
The Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) has called on the European Commission to reconsider its proposals contained in the Green Paper on EU labour law.
The consultation period on the proposals closes today.
The FSB is concerned that the Green Paper seeks to create a 'one size fits all' approach to labour markets across the EU, which would further reduce flexibility in the UK labour market and put future small business and employment growth under threat. There is also little in the document to protect the right to be self-employed.
Although the Green Paper accepts that there is a need to reduce administration burdens for small businesses, the FSB is now calling for action after many years of undelivered promises.
Many workers prefer the traditional informality, flexibility and convenience of working for small businesses. Twelve million people work for small businesses in the UK alone.
Since the 1980s 80% of big businesses in the US started as small businesses, whilst in the EU 80% of big businesses are the result of mergers. This demonstrates the failure of the EU at nurturing the self employed and small businesses to become bigger.
Over 50% of jobs in the EU are created by less than 5% of hi-tech SMEs and 99.8% of businesses are SMEs – therefore the current set-up of the social dialogue with trade unions talking to big business at the exclusion of all other actors is bad for the European economy and bad for job creation.






