Despite officially defending the immediate end of , the government admits, behind the scenes, that there will be a transition for companies to adapt. And the negotiations indicate that the deadline should be three years, as defended by the president of the Chamber, (-PB), to PT parliamentarians.
The report would be presented this Wednesday (20) as there was no agreement on the transition deadline.
The hammer has not yet been struck, but a proposal that is on the table is to reduce the first hour in the first 90 days and the remaining three hours in a staggered manner until 2029 — one hour of working day reduction per year.
Government officials state, with reservations, that the initial discussions were moving towards a transition in four years, one hour per year.
Businesspeople wanted more time and . In a meeting this Tuesday (19), Motta discussed the topic with the rapporteur, deputy Léo Prates (Republicanos-BA) and government ministers.
A common denominator has not yet been reached. A wing of the PT insists on a two-year transition. Thus, two hours would already be reduced this year.
The argument is that the worker will not feel the change if just one hour is reduced from the total workload. The end of the 6×1 scale will be the motto of Lula’s campaign.
The Minister of the General Secretariat of the Presidency, went so far as to say that companies could adapt in a few months and, therefore, defended immediate application.
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