Abolition of the reorientation indemnity’s (partial) reimbursement: a (significant) additional cost for employers conducting a collective lay-off
February, 2023 - Emma Van Caenegem, ALTIUS/Tiberghien
This reimbursement scheme has recently been abolished. Employers now have to bear the full cost of the reorientation indemnity, even if it exceeds the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice cost. This is one of the budget measures that the government decided upon last year, and it could result in a (significant) increase in employers’ restructuring costs.
1. What is a reorientation indemnity?
Employers conducting a collective lay-off are required either to establish a redeployment cell[1]or to affiliate with an existing redeployment cell.
Affected employees with a length of service of at least 1 year at the time of the collective lay-off’s announcement date are entitled to a reorientation indemnity if they participate in the redeployment cell.
The reorientation indemnity varies according to an employee’s age at the collective lay-off’s announcement date:
- Employees aged < 45 are entitled to a reorientation indemnity equal to 3 months’ salary;
- Employees aged ≥ 45 are entitled to a reorientation indemnity equal to 6 months’ salary.
The reorientation indemnity is paid out to employees on a monthly basis and it fully or partially replaces the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice. If the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice exceeds the reorientation indemnity, then the employee will receive the balance of the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice.
Example: An employee is aged 50 at the date of the collective lay-off announcement. On the basis of his length of service, the employee is entitled to a statutory indemnity in lieu of notice equal to 10 months and 26 weeks of salary. The employee participates in the redeployment cell. The employee will receive a monthly reorientation indemnity for a period of 6 months from the employer. Afterwards, the employee will receive the balance of the indemnity in lieu of notice for the amount of 4 months and 26 weeks’ salary.
2. Looking back: (partial) reimbursement of the reorientation indemnity by the unemployment office
Depending upon an employee’s age and length of service, it is possible that an employer is required to pay a reorientation indemnity of which the cost is higher than the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice.
In such a scenario, the employer has had, until recently, the right to claim a reimbursement from the unemployment office (“RVA”/“Onem”) that covers the difference between the reorientation indemnity cost and the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice cost.
Example: An employee is aged 50 at the date of the collective lay-off announcement. The statutory indemnity in lieu of notice amounts to 13 weeks’ salary. The employee participates in the redeployment cell. The employee will receive a reorientation indemnity for a 6 month period from the employer. The employer was allowed to file a request with the unemployment office to obtain reimbursement of the cost corresponding to the additional 13 weeks’ salary.
3. What's new?The abolition of the reimbursement scheme for collective lay-offs announces sinds 1 January 2023
As part of the government’s budget plans for the coming years (including a requirement for the unemployment office to achieve savings), the reimbursement scheme was abolished.
This means that employers announcing a collective lay-off after 31 December 2022 no longer have the right to claim reimbursement from the unemployment office to the extent that the reorientation indemnity cost exceeds the statutory indemnity in lieu of notice cost.
This measure means there is now an increased cost for employers when restructuring.
4. Take away
The increased cost must be taken into account in the context of budgeting exercises/simulations, especially for social plan negotiations.
ALTIUS' Employment team is available to assist and guide employers through any restructuring (collective lay-off, closure, etc.), including providing practical advice and assistance with social plan negotiations and drafting social plans.
Footnotes: [1] Except if they employ maximum 20 employees and do not call upon the system of unemployment benefits with company allowance (“SWT”/”RCC”) with a reduced age. |