European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers
The European Globalisation Adjustment Fund for Displaced Workers was set up by the European Union in late 2006 to support to workers who have been made redundant as a result of trade liberalisation, so that they can either remain in employment or find a new job quickly. It provides counselling; job search and mobility allowances; new ICT skills and other forms of training; entrepreneurial support, including micro-credits.
Since 2007 EGF has received more than 100 applications from 20 EU member states for programs that would support more than 100,000 workers who either lost their jobs due to globalization or as a result of the 2008 financial crisis. The hardest-hit industries were in automobile manufacturing, machinery and equipment, textile and apparel, computers, mobile phones and ICT and construction.
Conditions for assistance
The Fund is activated upon request of a member state when a company lays off more than 1,000 people either in an enterprise, or in a sector within a region, due to structural changes in world trade. The Fund seeks to intervene when redundancies have a significant impact on a region or a sector and therefore there is an EU dimension in terms of scale and impact.The EGF is open to all persons who work legally in the EU. It operates under the principle of subsidiarity, and in a system of shared management between the European Commission and the member state. Responsibility for implementing the EGF lies with the authorities of the member states. The maximum amount available through the EGF is €500 million per year for the period of 2007 to 2013.
Activities
Since 1 January 2007, the EGF has been funding active labour market policies helping workers made redundant as a result of globalisation, for example through:- Job-search assistance, occupational guidance, tailor-made training and retraining including IT skills and certification of acquired experience, outplacement assistance and entrepreneurship promotion or aid for self-employment,
- Special time-limited measures, such as job-search allowances, allowances to individuals participating in lifelong learning and training activities,
- Measures to stimulate in particular disadvantaged or older workers, to remain in or return to employment.