“Economic recovery law is not expected to help many private sector workers”

The budgetary recovery bill, expected to be voted in second reading during today, is not expected to help many private sector workers. That is how Private Sector Workers Union Chairman Yusuf Azemi, who in an interview for Kosovo Press, says there are over 100,000 workers who want [...]
That is how Private Sector Workers Union Chairman Yusuf Azemi, who in an interview for Kosovo Press, says there are over 100,000 workers who will benefit less than 20 euros from this package.
While saying this package will be simulating for the public sector rather than for the private one.
The “will not be for private sector workers because over 100,000 workers will benefit from the package for economic recovery, eight, nine, eventually 10 euros, eventually up to 20 euros will be the maximum, for over 100 thousand workers, which means that the package of economic recovery will still be simulating for the public sector how much for the private sector”, Azemi has told the KP.
Azemi estimates that the amendments proposed by the PDK are positive, however, adds that the failure so far will not justify the Government of Kosovo, for the damages it has caused this sector.
I wish this last-minute package to be voted on is the signals that this will be voted into, however, means the evil they have done so far, there is no justification. It's a bit more advanced than that. The most advanced package is because workers under 10,000 euros in savings will be simulated, or reimbursed, their tools since 2023, and it is money for workers who have lost their jobs to be paid for three months out of 300 Euro”, he says.
Azzam says that this package will earn about 30,000 workers, but the greatest sorrow is what will be done with over 100,000 workers who do not have business contracts where the state will not pay because there is no evidence for those workers.
He says these people will lose their right to take advantage of this package because they've been working all the time without contracts.
Azzam says that so far there are 80 thousand workers who have lost their jobs, and that by the end of this year the figure will be exceeded to over 100,000.











