Post by account_disabled on Mar 12, 2024 23:07:24 GMT -6
Ayuso's aziness claimed 7hospitality or commerce businesses
The impact of the pandemic on self-employment, especially in those activities and sectors directly affected by health restrictions, is being especially virulent in the Community of Madrid, where according to Social Security affiliation data between December 2019 and 2020, 2,473 self-employed workers were lost in hospitality and local commerce . This means that in the region 7 small hospitality and commerce establishments closed every day last year , to which, according to the Union of Associations of Self-Employed Workers and Entrepreneurs, the government chaired by Isabel Díaz Ayuso has responded with “laziness and.
Lack of support measures, despite his inexplicable triumphalist speech.” Furthermore, according to the latest Active Population Survey, Madrid has lost up to 14,600 self-employed employers - that is, creators of salaried jobs - between the last quarter of 2019 and 2020 , which represents a drop of 14.5%. , significantly more pronounced than the 10% decline in the country as a whole. Privatizations and contracts 'Ayuso Sociedad Limitada' These figures reflect the helplessness that Madrid's self-employed workers suffer from their regional Executive. The Union of the Self-Employed recalls that already in April it AOL Email List denounced that the measures announced by Ayuso for the self-employed in the face of the crisis triggered by Covid-19 “left out 2 out of every 10 self-employed workers and were conditioned to remain active during the following year, when “The reality for self-employed workers is that they do not know if they will be able to open next month.” The surprising thing, they warn from UATAE, is that while the Madrid president allows herself to be used as an example of support for the hospitality industry: “She should give fewer lessons to other communities, taking into account that Madrid.
The only region without direct measures for the hospitality industry, and stop stuffing your mouth with your supposed support for hoteliers because it is not substantiated by facts,” they say. Furthermore, it is surprising that Ayuso confronts Madrid's pandemic and crisis management model with that of, for example, Catalonia: "Without a doubt, the Generalitat has a lot to do in terms of protecting its self-employed workers and sectors such as hospitality or commerce, but the figures in Madrid are worse in terms of loss of self-employment in those sectors (more than double the Catalan decline) but so are the epidemiological data, with a cumulative incidence in Madrid of 993 cases per 100,000 inhabitants compared to to 564 in Catalonia", so "Ayuso should focus on solving Madrid's problems, which are many, before giving lessons." "Ayuso should give fewer lessons to other communities and stop filling its mouth.
The impact of the pandemic on self-employment, especially in those activities and sectors directly affected by health restrictions, is being especially virulent in the Community of Madrid, where according to Social Security affiliation data between December 2019 and 2020, 2,473 self-employed workers were lost in hospitality and local commerce . This means that in the region 7 small hospitality and commerce establishments closed every day last year , to which, according to the Union of Associations of Self-Employed Workers and Entrepreneurs, the government chaired by Isabel Díaz Ayuso has responded with “laziness and.
Lack of support measures, despite his inexplicable triumphalist speech.” Furthermore, according to the latest Active Population Survey, Madrid has lost up to 14,600 self-employed employers - that is, creators of salaried jobs - between the last quarter of 2019 and 2020 , which represents a drop of 14.5%. , significantly more pronounced than the 10% decline in the country as a whole. Privatizations and contracts 'Ayuso Sociedad Limitada' These figures reflect the helplessness that Madrid's self-employed workers suffer from their regional Executive. The Union of the Self-Employed recalls that already in April it AOL Email List denounced that the measures announced by Ayuso for the self-employed in the face of the crisis triggered by Covid-19 “left out 2 out of every 10 self-employed workers and were conditioned to remain active during the following year, when “The reality for self-employed workers is that they do not know if they will be able to open next month.” The surprising thing, they warn from UATAE, is that while the Madrid president allows herself to be used as an example of support for the hospitality industry: “She should give fewer lessons to other communities, taking into account that Madrid.
The only region without direct measures for the hospitality industry, and stop stuffing your mouth with your supposed support for hoteliers because it is not substantiated by facts,” they say. Furthermore, it is surprising that Ayuso confronts Madrid's pandemic and crisis management model with that of, for example, Catalonia: "Without a doubt, the Generalitat has a lot to do in terms of protecting its self-employed workers and sectors such as hospitality or commerce, but the figures in Madrid are worse in terms of loss of self-employment in those sectors (more than double the Catalan decline) but so are the epidemiological data, with a cumulative incidence in Madrid of 993 cases per 100,000 inhabitants compared to to 564 in Catalonia", so "Ayuso should focus on solving Madrid's problems, which are many, before giving lessons." "Ayuso should give fewer lessons to other communities and stop filling its mouth.