Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?

This paper examines the perceptions of firms in April 2020, one month after the Spanish Government declared the state of alarm, about how the COVID-19 pandemic will affect their business activity in the following months, and what employment decisions they expect to make in response. The data for the...

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Main Authors: Juan Laborda, Pilar Rivera-Torres, Vicente Salas-Fumas, Cristina Suárez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253331
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spelling doaj-7dc321bdc8ee4e829c2a3cc0f521ed322021-07-10T04:30:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01166e025333110.1371/journal.pone.0253331Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?Juan LabordaPilar Rivera-TorresVicente Salas-FumasCristina SuárezThis paper examines the perceptions of firms in April 2020, one month after the Spanish Government declared the state of alarm, about how the COVID-19 pandemic will affect their business activity in the following months, and what employment decisions they expect to make in response. The data for the study was collected by the Government of the region of Aragon (Spain) through a survey of a non-randomly selected sample of firms located in the region. In addition to prospects and intended actions, firms were asked whether or not they had applied for ERTE aid (the Spanish job retention scheme to contain the pandemic crisis). We find that firms participating (voluntarily and anonymously) in the survey anticipated rather well the severity of the effects of the pandemic in the following months. The ERTE aid helped firms to maintain the jobs of their inactive employees, while firms that did not ask for aid responded by laying off employees. Further, the ERTE aid helped to maintain the jobs of furloughed employees, but the firms receiving ERTE aid expected to lay off the same proportion of employees as firms without that aid, controlling for the different anticipated effects of the pandemic in the two groups of firms.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253331
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Laborda
Pilar Rivera-Torres
Vicente Salas-Fumas
Cristina Suárez
spellingShingle Juan Laborda
Pilar Rivera-Torres
Vicente Salas-Fumas
Cristina Suárez
Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
PLoS ONE
author_facet Juan Laborda
Pilar Rivera-Torres
Vicente Salas-Fumas
Cristina Suárez
author_sort Juan Laborda
title Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
title_short Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
title_full Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
title_fullStr Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
title_full_unstemmed Is there life beyond the Spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by COVID-19?
title_sort is there life beyond the spanish government's aid to furloughed employees by covid-19?
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This paper examines the perceptions of firms in April 2020, one month after the Spanish Government declared the state of alarm, about how the COVID-19 pandemic will affect their business activity in the following months, and what employment decisions they expect to make in response. The data for the study was collected by the Government of the region of Aragon (Spain) through a survey of a non-randomly selected sample of firms located in the region. In addition to prospects and intended actions, firms were asked whether or not they had applied for ERTE aid (the Spanish job retention scheme to contain the pandemic crisis). We find that firms participating (voluntarily and anonymously) in the survey anticipated rather well the severity of the effects of the pandemic in the following months. The ERTE aid helped firms to maintain the jobs of their inactive employees, while firms that did not ask for aid responded by laying off employees. Further, the ERTE aid helped to maintain the jobs of furloughed employees, but the firms receiving ERTE aid expected to lay off the same proportion of employees as firms without that aid, controlling for the different anticipated effects of the pandemic in the two groups of firms.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253331
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