Skilled labor shortage drives part-time work: Employers respond

The desire for more part-time work is growing among employees and companies. This response to the skilled labor shortage, changing needs, and a transforming labor market leaves many workers with little choice but to reduce their hours due to high job stresses.

In Germany, the demand for part-time positions is increasing, driven by an acute skilled labor shortage. Companies are adapting by promoting flexible work models to meet changing needs of the workforce and respond to a dynamic labor market. However, many employees feel compelled to reduce their working hours due to high job stresses, as full-time demands often become unsustainable. This trend highlights the challenges in the labor market, where the lack of qualified workers leads to adjustments in work organization. The development illustrates how economic pressures and personal strains interact to question traditional full-time models.

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Split-scene photo of CDU's part-time work abolition proposal: empty full-time offices vs. protesting mothers demanding childcare.
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CDU push to abolish part-time right draws criticism

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The CDU's economic wing proposes abolishing the legal right to part-time work to create more full-time jobs and combat the skilled labor shortage. Critics warn, however, that this ignores the real causes and could push qualified women out of the workforce. Instead, unions and experts call for expanding childcare infrastructure.

North Rhine-Westphalia's Labor Minister Karl-Josef Laumann has sharply criticized his CDU party's wording in the debate over 'lifestyle part-time work.' The CDU deputy chairman calls for more tact and emphasizes that Germans are diligent. He considers the economic wing's proposal unlikely to pass.

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A 20-year-old recent high school graduate shares frustration over the lack of permanent jobs after graduation. Despite applying and wanting to work, only summer and seasonal positions are available. The question arises how young people can get a chance in today's job market.

The employment rate for people in their 20s fell in 2025 for the first time in five years, due to a shrinking population and a weak job market. Data from the Ministry of Data and Statistics showed the rate at 60.2 percent, down 0.8 percentage points from the previous year—the first decline since 2020. The number of employed youths totaled 3.44 million, a drop of 170,000.

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Colombia's unemployment rate fell to 10.9% in January 2026, according to Dane, marking a 0.8 percentage point improvement from January 2025. Andi president Bruce Mac Master questioned the one-point drop in informality and noted that job growth was driven by non-salaried positions.

South Korea added 193,000 jobs in 2025, maintaining year-on-year employment growth at the 100,000 level for the second straight year despite ongoing losses in manufacturing and construction. Data from the Ministry of Data and Statistics showed the number of employed people rose 0.7 percent to 28.77 million from a year earlier. While youth employment remained sluggish, jobs for those aged 60 and older saw the largest increase.

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The Bureau of Labor Statistics' February 2026 employment report revealed a 92,000 decline in nonfarm payrolls—the second-worst monthly drop in three years—reversing January's revised 126,000 gain and extending the slowdown from December's 50,000 increase. Released March 7, the data showed unemployment rising 0.1 percentage point in a low-hiring, low-firing labor market.

 

 

 

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