Home » HR practices » Professional development » Legal developments » National legislation » Austria: new government plans labour market adjustments Austria: new government plans labour market adjustments Austria's new coalition government took office on 3 March, after five months of negotiations. The coalition is made up of the country's conservative (ÖVP), social democratic (SPÖ) and liberal (NEOS) parties. Although the programme presented by Chancellor Christian Stocker (ÖVP) and social affairs minister Corinna Schumann (NEOS) does not include a major labour market reform, it does provide for rationalisation measures such as the reform of educational leave, but the approach to bolstering full-time work emains vague. By Thomas Schnee. Published on 04 March 2025 à 12h22 - Update on 17 July 2025 à 17h28 Resources At the end of February 2025, 429,940 people were registered as unemployed or in training with the Austrian employment service (AMS). The Austrian unemployment rate is now 8.1%, compared with 7.6% a year ago. This is not “an easy start for a new federal government”, commented Johannes Kopf, co-president of the AMS, who presented the unemployment figures on the same day as the formation of the new government. Kopf expects the unemployment rate to continue to rise during the year. “It is all the more important that the new federal government has announced its intention to invest more in the labour market,”… Thomas Schnee Foreign workersOlder workers Need more info ? Contact mind's on-demand study service Which service do you want to contact :WritingCommercial serviceTechnical SupportFirst nameLast nameOrganizationFunctionemail* Object of the messageYour messageRGPD J’accepte la politique de confidentialité.PhoneThis field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. Essentials Latest articles Longer careers: a new state of affairs for companies CSRD: social and environmental reporting market takes shape Analysis & Data Latest articles Paternity leave: data observations from 41 countries EU: during H1 2022 five EU Member States have raised their minimum salary levels