Recommendation concerning Part-Time Work
Recommendation:R182
Place: Geneva
Session of the Conference:81
Date of adoption=24:06:1994
The General Conference of the International Labour
Organization,
Having been convened at Geneva by the Governing Body of the
International Labour Office, and having met in its 81st Session on 7 June 1994,
and
Having decided upon the adoption of certain proposals with
regard to part-time work, which is the fourth item on the agenda of the session,
and
Having determined that these proposals shall take the form
of a Recommendation supplementing the Part-Time Work Convention, 1994;
adopts this twenty-fourth day of June of the year one
thousand nine hundred and ninety-four the following Recommendation, which may be
cited as the Part-Time Work Recommendation, 1994:
The provisions of this Recommendation should be
considered in conjunction with those of the Part-Time Work Convention, 1994
(hereafter referred to as "the Convention").
For the purposes of this Recommendation:
the term "part-time worker" means an
employed person whose normal hours of work are less than those of
comparable full-time workers;
the normal hours of work referred to in clause (a)
may be calculated weekly or on average over a given period of
employment;
the term "comparable full-time worker "
refers to a full-time worker who:
has the same type of employment relationship;
is engaged in the same or a similar type of work
or occupation; and
is employed in the same establishment or, when
there is no comparable full-time worker in that establishment, in
the same enterprise or, when there is no comparable full-time worker
in that enterprise, in the same branch of activity,
as
the part-time worker concerned;
full-time workers affected by partial unemployment,
that is by a collective and temporary reduction in their normal hours of
work for economic, technical or structural reasons, are not considered
to be part-time workers.
This Recommendation applies to all part-time workers.
In accordance with national law and practice, employers
should consult the representatives of the workers concerned on the
introduction or extension of part-time work on a broad scale, on the rules
and procedures applying to such work and on the protective and promotional
measures that may be appropriate.
Part-time workers should be informed of their specific
conditions of employment in writing or by any other means consistent with
national law and practice.
The adaptations to be made in accordance with Article 6
of the Convention to statutory social security schemes which are based on
occupational activity should aim at:
if appropriate, progressively reducing
threshold requirements based on earnings or hours of work as a condition
for coverage by these schemes;
as appropriate, granting to part-time workers minimum
or flat-rate benefits, in particular old-age, sickness, invalidity and
maternity benefits, as well as family allowances;
accepting in principle that part-time workers whose
employment has come to an end or been suspended and who are seeking only
part-time employment meet the condition of availability for work
required for the payment of unemployment benefits;
reducing the risk that part-time workers may be
penalized by schemes which:
subject the right to benefits to a qualifying
period, expressed in terms of periods of contribution, of insurance
or of employment during a given reference period; or
fix the amount of benefits by reference both to
the average of former earnings and to the length of the periods of
contribution, of insurance or of employment.
Where appropriate, threshold requirements for access
to coverage under private occupational schemes which supplement or
replace statutory social security schemes should be progressively
reduced to allow part-time workers to be covered as widely as possible.
Part-time workers should be protected by such schemes
under conditions equivalent to those of comparable full-time workers.
Where appropriate, these conditions may be determined in proportion to
hours of work, contributions or earnings.
As appropriate, threshold requirements based on hours
of work or earnings as specified under Article 8 of the Convention in
the fields referred to in its Article 7 should be progressively reduced.
The periods of service required as a condition for
protection in the fields referred to in Article 7 of the Convention
should not be longer for part-time workers than for comparable full-time
workers.
Where part-time workers have more than one job, their
total hours of work, contributions or earnings should be taken into account
in determining whether they meet threshold requirements in statutory social
security schemes which are based on occupational activity.
Part-time workers should benefit on an equitable basis
from financial compensation, additional to basic wages, which is received by
comparable full-time workers.
All appropriate measures should be taken to ensure that
as far as practicable part-time workers have access on an equitable basis to
the welfare facilities and social services of the establishment concerned;
these facilities and services should, to the extent possible, be adapted to
take into account the needs of part-time workers.
The number and scheduling of hours of work of
part-time workers should be established taking into account the
interests of the worker as well as the needs of the establishment.
As far as possible, changes in the agreed work
schedule and work beyond scheduled hours should be subject to
restrictions and to prior notice.
The system of compensation for work beyond the agreed
work schedule should be subject to negotiations in accordance with
national law and practice.
In accordance with national law and practice, part-time
workers should have access on an equitable basis, and as far as possible
under equivalent conditions, to all forms of leave available to comparable
full-time workers, in particular paid educational leave, parental leave and
leave in cases of illness of a child or another member of a worker's
immediate family.
Where appropriate, the same rules should apply to
part-time workers as to comparable full-time workers with respect to
scheduling of annual leave and work on customary rest days and public
holidays.
Where appropriate, measures should be taken to overcome
specific constraints on the access of part-time workers to training, career
opportunities and occupational mobility.
Provisions of statutory social security schemes based on
occupational activity that may discourage recourse to or acceptance of
part-time work should be adapted, in particular those which:
result in proportionately higher contributions for
part-time workers unless these are justified by corresponding
proportionately higher benefits;
without reasonable grounds, significantly reduce the
unemployment benefits of unemployed workers who temporarily accept
part-time work;
overemphasize, in the calculation of old-age
benefits, the reduced income from part-time work undertaken solely
during the period preceding retirement.
Measures should be considered by employers to facilitate
access to part-time work at all levels of the enterprise, including skilled
and managerial positions where appropriate.
Where appropriate, employers should give
consideration to:
requests by workers for transfer from full-time
to part-time work that becomes available in the enterprise; and
requests by workers for transfer from part-time
to full-time work that becomes available in the enterprise.
Employers should provide timely information to the
workers on the availability of part-time and full-time positions in the
establishment, in order to facilitate transfers from full-time to
part-time work or vice versa.
A worker's refusal to transfer from full-time to
part-time work or vice versa should not in itself constitute a valid reason
for termination of employment, without prejudice to termination, in
accordance with national law and practice, for other reasons such as may
arise from the operational requirements of the establishment concerned.
Where national or establishment-level conditions permit,
workers should be enabled to transfer to part-time work in justified cases,
such as pregnancy or the need to care for a young child or a disabled or
sick member of a worker's immediate family, and subsequently to return to
full-time work.
Where obligations on employers depend on the number of
the workers they employ, part-time workers should be counted as full-time
workers. Nevertheless, where appropriate, part-time workers may be counted
proportionately to their hours of work, it being understood that where such
obligations refer to the protection mentioned in Article 4 of the
Convention, they should be counted as full-time workers.
Information should be disseminated on the protective
measures that apply to part-time work and on practical arrangements for
various part-time work schemes.