The legislative proposal Measures continued payment of wages in case of illness and WIA aims to make the obligations for employers and employees in case of illness easier, clearer and cheaper. Three major hurdles will be addressed: Continued payment of wages for two years in the event of sickness, the UWV doctor who overrules the company doctors, and a lowering of WIA benefits if the employee starts working.
The legislative proposal Measures continued payment of wages in case of illness and WIA aims to make the obligations for employers and employees in case of illness easier, clearer and cheaper. Three major hurdles will be addressed:
Employers are required to continue to pay a sick employee at least 70% of the wages during the first to years of sickness. This can be particularly burdensome for small employers with fewer than 25 employees. The legislative proposal provides for a financial subsidy to the continued wage payment costs for all employers, a total amount of EUR 450 million per year. This will be in the form of a reduction in contributions by 1 January 2021. The aim is to replace this reduction in contributions by 2024 at the latest with a differentiated Incapacity for Work Fund premium. Smaller employers will then pay a lower premium than large employers.
Currently, an employer following the advice of the company doctor might be subject to a wage sanction. After all, the UWV does not have to agree with the opinion of the company doctor when assessing the reintegration obligations after two years of illness. The legislative proposal means that the advice of the company doctor regarding the workload capacity of the employee as of 1 January 2021 will be leading in the reintegration assessment by the UWV. Wage sanctions as a result of a medical difference of opinion between the company doctor and the UWV doctor will then no longer occur.
Currently, WIA benefits are reduced if the person entitled to the benefits receives income from work. This constitutes a barrier for WIA beneficiaries to resume work. The legislative proposal aims that as of 1 July 2020, the WIA benefits will not be reduced for five years because of income. In this way, WIA beneficiaries will be stimulated to resume work.
Would you like stay informed about the further developments regarding this legislative proposal? Register for our newsletter! Do you have a sick employee and are you looking for legal advice? Please contact us:
From 1 April 2020, the Transition Payment Compensation Scheme will be in force. It applies to allowances paid on termination of a dormant employment contract. What do employers have to do to take advantage of this? Are they compensated for everything?
What are your obligations, as an employer, if one of your employees has been off work sick for a long term?
On Monday 4 November 2024, Russell Advocaten Russell Advocaten will host a seminar on Dutch labour law for diplomats, consular agents, and administrative staff from Embassies and Consulates in collaboration with Diplomat Magazine.
On Wednesday 2 October 2024, Jan Dop will be one of the members of the panel that will present timely labor and employment law issues to Primerus clients.
On Tuesday 24 September 2024, Reinier Russell and Jan Dop will speak at the Technical Meeting of PAiE, the organisation of professional accountants in Europe.
From 1 January 2025, the Dutch Tax and Customs Administration is going to enforce the Deregulation of Assessment of Employment Relationships Act (DBA). How will this affect principals and self-employed workers?