07
Mon, Jul

Greek Hoteliers Push Back on Labor Reforms and Tourism Investment Policy

Greek Hoteliers Push Back on Labor Reforms and Tourism Investment Policy

Hellenic Shipping News

Greece’s influential hotel industry is raising alarm over recent government reforms,

Greece’s influential hotel industry is raising alarm over recent government reforms, challenging official labor data and expressing frustration with policies that appear to sideline large parts of the country’s tourism sector.

The Hellenic Hoteliers Federation (POX) has publicly criticized the Ministry of Labor for a lack of transparency surrounding the Digital Work Card, a system introduced to modernize labor monitoring and reduce undeclared work. According to POX, the Ministry—led by Labor Minister Niki Kerameus—has repeatedly failed to explain how it calculates the reported increases in overtime hours.

Federation Questions Overtime Figures

The federation has requested formal clarification on whether the numbers include categories such as “additional work” (previously untracked by Greece’s ERGANI employment database) or break time, which is not legally considered paid work. Without this context, POX argues, it’s impossible to accurately assess the actual amount of overtime worked in the hotel sector.

Even if the government’s reported figure of 45,000 overtime hours is correct, POX says the number is negligible. With more than 220,000 people employed in hotels, and assuming only half were actively working in April, the average amounts to less than 30 minutes of overtime per worker for the entire month—or under one minute per

Content Original Link:

Read Full article form Original Source OIKONOMIKOS TAXYDROMOS

" target="_blank">

Read Full article form Original Source OIKONOMIKOS TAXYDROMOS

SILVER ADVERTISERS

BRONZE ADVERTISERS

Infomarine banners

Advertise in Maritime Directory

Publishers

Publishers