Still Confused about what should you ask your employers to pay you? Hope this will give you an Idea. This is an article about the minimum wage in Germany.
Minimum wage is not an old concept in Germany. While it was into existence in other European countries. Germany’s first federal minimum wage was approved in 2014, under the minimum wage act (Mindestlohngesetz). Before this, Germany relied on businesses and trade unions to set minimum wages.
The minimum wage in Germany has increased by €0.35 (4%) in 2019. It is €9.19 per hour, means pre-tax wages of €1,593 for people working full time i.e. standard 40 hours a week. All workers aged 18 or older are paid under this act and around 4 million or more people are paid just the German minimum wage in Germany. The exceptions are also there, people like, who are self-employed, trainees or doing an internship. It will be even more in 2020, from 1 January 2020 it will be €9.35 per hour.
This federal law is not just for the Citizens it is for all the employees, including all the international living and working in Germany, part-time, full-time, interns (depends on the internship). Temporary Workers and people working on contract basis have a different wage level. It was increased to €9.47 an hour in western Germany and €9.27 an hour in eastern Germany since April 2018. The Government established a hotline and salary calculator to calculate your minimum wage base on how many hours you are working. The hotline is called Mindestlohn-Hotline.
Here you can find all the contact numbers like for labor law, mini-jobs, part-time, minimum wage, etc.
https://www.bmas.de/DE/Service/Buergertelefon/buergertelefon.html
Minimum wage is helping a majority of workers but still, it doesn’t cover people working as freelancers and self-employed. It also doesn’t apply to the internships that last fewer than three months or are part of university courses, volunteer work or apprenticeships.
You can find more details on the exclusion here.
They also monitor underpayment at an industry level, they have employee unions within the industry, Employees can speak with their employer first if that doesn’t resolve the problem they can reach out to the union and can officially register a complaint against it.
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