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The payment bodies have the following mission: to provide the unemployed with
the necessary information and documents; to communicate all applications for
unemployment benefit to the unemployment offices; to pay unemployment benefit
and other allowances.
There are four payment bodies in Belgium:
- FGTB – General Workers’ Federation of Belgium
- CGSLB – Central Federation of Free Trade Unions of Belgium
- CSC – Confederation of Christian Trade Unions
- Capac – Auxiliary Unemployment Benefit Payment Fund
The Trade Unions
A trade union is an organised association of workers, recognised by the law,
which comes together with a view to protecting their rights at the work place
and influencing their working conditions. Through trade union membership,
workers can have an impact on work-related issues such as pay, working hours,
benefits, health and safety at the work place and a number of other related
matters. Governments are responsible for drafting laws that comply with the
rules of the International Labour Organisation (a United Nations agency), in
particular the right to form and to join a trade union.
Trade unions constitute an essential element in ensuring a fair, balanced
workplace. They speak on behalf of male and female workers. They support them to
ensure that they have the right to better pay, a higher standard of living, safe
workplaces and job security. A large number of the advantages and much of the
protection that workers enjoy now were obtained through the efforts of trade
unions in the past. This protection can easily be lost if the trade unions do
not remain strong.
Impact of trade unions
Your voice in the work place: through their trade unions, workers
negotiate pay, working hours, benefits and working conditions with their
employers. Without a trade union, the management could take every decision
unilaterally.
Strength through union: your trade union enables you to negotiate to
obtain improvements for an entire group, not just an individual. Working
together means greater power and more opportunities to have your voice heard.
Protection and support: trade unions ensure that your rights at the work place
are respected and dispute any decision or act that is unfair or questionable.
Improvement of labour laws: trade unions reinforce and improve laws on
health and safety, as well as economic and other laws relating to industry and
the professions.
Activities and action
- Collective bargaining: when trade unions are able to act freely and are
recognised by employers, they can negotiate working conditions with
employers
- Protection of workers against illegal dismissal, and negotiation with
employers if major future changes must be made at the work place
- Assistance, training and representation of members
- Professional action: when necessary, trade unions can organise strikes or
resistance to a lock-out to promote specific demands
- Political activity: trade unions can promote legislation that is
favourable to the interests of their members and workers and to the
community as a whole
The more members a trade union has, the greater its influence will be as an
organisation representing workers. It is the size of a trade union which decides
its strength in terms of negotiations aimed at protecting and improving the
working conditions of its members. If you want your interests to be defended,
you must inform other people. By joining a trade union, you can communicate your
particular interests to a group which has the necessary resources to defend
them. Whether you work in a large or small company, in the public or the private
sector, you can join a trade union. A trade union may very well be already
present at your work place to represent workers. You can ask your colleagues
whether there is a trade union in your company, and if so, which one. If there
is one, find out about your rights: contact the trade union or trade union
representative (colleague elected to help other workers with trade union issues)
who will inform you of your rights and benefits. If there is no trade union in
your company or if you want further information about trade unions in your
country, you will find below a list of national central trade union
organisations in each country with a link to their website and/or contact
details. They can put you in contact with your trade union.
Capac
Capac: Caisse auxiliaire de paiement des allocations de chômage
(auxiliary unemployment benefit payment fund), is a public social security
institution which pays unemployment benefit and similar allowances (holidays for
young people, activation, local employment agencies, etc.). It provides
replacement income for over 120,000 beneficiaries each month.
Text last edited on: 05/2009
Source: European Union © European Communities, 1995-2009 Reproduction is authorised.
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