It didn't look too badly off.
While the violence of the health crisis brought down entire swathes of the economy, the dreaded social disaster seemed until recently rather contained.
Unfortunately, the coming months could change the situation.
Especially since faced with the reality of the figures stands the more contrasted one on the ground.
“What we observe when we look at the statistics for the year 2020 is that there are certainly more social plans than in 2018 or 2019 but that there are above all much less than in 2009, when the crisis of bank and then sovereign debts, although the impact was less strong, caused an avalanche of layoffs, ”
notes Christian Pellet, founder and chairman of Sextant Expertise.
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At the height of the subprime crisis, several dozen job protection plans (PSE) were announced each week, and more than 2,200 had been identified over the year.
A peak that is unlikely to reach
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