EP backs €2.3 million worth of aid to help 550 redundant media workers in Greece
550 media workers dismissed by three publishing companies will receive EU aid worth €2,308,500 to help them find new jobs.
The aid will be used to fund a series of measures co-financed by the European Globalisation Adjustment Fund (EGF). These measures will help the 550 workers to find new jobs by providing them with occupational guidance, training, retraining and vocational training, specific advice geared towards entrepreneurship, contributions to business start-ups and a variety of allowances. All the redundant workers are expected to be included in the measures.
All the redundancies occurred in Attica, which accounts for 35% of total Greek unemployment and for 36% of long-term unemployment. In total, 15% of the workers made redundant are over 55 years old, and 42% are women, says the report by Eider Gardiazabal Rubial (S&D, ES). They were employed by the three enterprises “Lambrakis Press SA (DOL)”, “Ethnos Publications SA” and “Pegasus Magazines Publications”.
Over the period 2011-2017, daily and periodical press sales plummeted in Greece. Newspaper sales fell from 144 million copies in 2011 to 57 million in 2017 and magazine sales fell from 60 million copies to 23 million.
Greece argues that the steady decline in the sector is the consequence of the global economic and financial crisis, which still affects the Greek economy (decline in per capita real GDP, rising unemployment, decreasing salaries and reduced household income etc.), coupled with the rapid digital evolution, which is transforming the publishing sector.
The total estimated cost of the package is €3.8 million, of which the EGF would provide €2.3 million (60%).
The report by Eider Gardiazabal Rubial (S&D, ES), recommending that Parliament approve the aid, was passed by the full house on Thursday by 556 votes to 76, and 4 abstentions.
Background
The European Globalisation Adjustment Fund contributes to packages of tailor-made services to help redundant workers find new jobs. Its annual ceiling is €150 million.