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Targeting employment regulations By Remigijus Šimašius
Legal Expert, LFMI "The Free Market", 1999 No. 2 In exploring different areas of economic policy, LFMI came across a domain which is still a taboo subject in our society. This is employment regulation, an area almost untouched by the changes that have swept the country over the past years. Western champions of a free market have long challenged planned economy, calling for the removal of privileges of trade union and preposterous regulations (e.g., shorter working hours, a ban on shops being open at weekends, etc.). Lithuania is faced with similar problems. Some employment regulations are stricter and others looser relative to those in the West. Many of today's problems - troubled companies, delayed wages, growing unemployment - are the outcomes of ill-considered employment regulations. Most provisions of labour law were adopted after the restoration of independence. But we are still living according to the Labour Code of the Soviet era, with only minor changes effected over the past years. The functioning labour laws seem to have been created in the spirit of full employment. They sanction extensive, ill-judged employment regulations which impede the development of a market economy and reduce its effectiveness. LFMI analysed employment regulations applicable in Lithuania and formulated guidelines for their revision.
To promote these changes, LFMI submitted to the Economic Ministry a package of amendments to the Laws on Labour Contracts, Support of the Unemployed, Remuneration for Labour, Collective Agreements, and Regulations of Collective Disputes. LFMI thus spurred discussion and initiated work to revise labour policy and employment regulations.
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