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Bye-bye, Benito - An overhaul of Brazilian labour law should spur job creation

Michel Temer s reform has teeth

IN THE litany of bosses gripes about Brazil s inclement business climate,

rigid labour laws vie for pride of place with its convoluted tax laws and its

licensing rules (on everything from health and safety to protection of cultural

heritage). No wonder: Brazil ranks a miserable 117th out of 138 countries on

labour-market efficiency, according to the World Economic Forum. Its rigid

labour law was transplanted from Benito Mussolini s Italy in 1943. Employers

find it thoroughly unsuited to a modern economy and cheered on July 13th, when

the president, Michel Temer, signed into law the biggest overhaul of the

unwieldy statute in 50 years.

The reform is a big victory for the unpopular Mr Temer, who is under

investigation in a corruption scandal (he denies wrongdoing). It introduces

more flexible working hours, eases restrictions on part-time work, relaxes how

workers can divvy up their holidays and cuts the statutory lunch hour to 30

minutes. It also scraps dues that all employees must pay to their company s

designated union, regardless of whether or not they are members. Just as

important, collective agreements between employers and workers will overrule

many of the labour code s provisions.

Once the new rules take effect in four months time, they will be valid for

existing employment contracts, not just new ones. Mr Temer hopes they will dent

Brazil s unemployment rate, stuck above 13% after a three-year recession.

Bosses are ecstatic about the changes. The National Confederation of Industry

said that the reform represents longed-for progress . Banco Santander, a

Spanish-owned bank, said it reckons the reform could eventually lead to the

creation of 2.3m new jobs.

Small firms also have much to gain. The new rules formalise what we now do

informally , enthuses a S o Paulo caterer. The bank of actual hours worked by

her cooks and waiters, necessary in a business where inflexible nine-to-five

contracts make little sense, will now be legal. An executive at a European

multinational says that an unofficial spreadsheet that keeps track of his

employees real time off, which he confesses to maintaining alongside an

official tally of employees annual 30 vacation days, can also be consigned to

the dustbin. (The old law said that leave had to be split into at most two

segments, with one holiday lasting at least 20 days.)

Such ruses have been common in Brazilian workplaces, but are risky. Employees

who leave or are laid off regularly sue employers over the slightest of

transgressions of the labour code, spurred on by litigious lawyers. Last year

Brazil s labour courts heard nearly 4m cases (see chart), mostly brought by

aggrieved workers. Fines levied on firms totalled 24bn reais ($7bn).

The reform ought to reduce such legal risks, which can afflict firms whether

they observe the rules or not. Gabriel Margulies, whose company, UnderMe,

produces 50,000 pairs of undergarments a month, says he will at last be able to

grant requests to staff who would prefer, say, to go home early in exchange for

a shorter lunch break. Until now he has declined for fear of losing in court.

That has not stopped former employees from suing in the hope that Brazil s

famously worker-friendly judges side with them. Even unsuccessful suits are an

unwelcome distraction from running a business, Mr Margulies laments.

Maur cio Guidi of Pinheiro Neto, a firm of lawyers, observes that the reform

might even change this confrontational workplace culture into a more consensual

one. But it remains to be seen how the labour unions will react, notes Marcelo

Silva, vice-chairman of Magazine Luiza, a big retailer. The main union

confederations have condemned the reform. They fume about the loss of revenue

from dues. To placate them, Mr Temer has hinted he may amend the reform by

decree, which is subject to a simple up-or-down vote in Congress, in order to

phase out the obligatory dues gradually (and possibly water down some other

provisions). But he cannot go too far. The only way for the scandal-hit

president to keep his job may be to help some of his 13.8m unemployed

compatriots find work.