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						Staff wanted: pensioners welcome, but anyone, really
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		 [February 08, 2019]   
		By Gergely Szakacs 
 BUDAPEST (Reuters) - Zsuzsanna Czeizel told 
		herself she'd never work again after she retired in 2012. But since 
		October, she's held a job -- scanning boxes of sweets in a large 
		warehouse near Budapest.
 
 The 65-year-old pensioner is one of a growing number of retirees hired 
		by companies in eastern Europe desperate for workers. Economic growth 
		and an exodus of millions workers to richer parts of the European Union 
		have left gaping holes in local labor markets.
 
 Companies have hiked wages and some turned to automation or acquiring 
		rivals. But for Laszlo Tamasi, who runs a sweets retailer on the 
		outskirts of Budapest, robots are no use -- they can't serve walk-in 
		customers.
 
 So he hired Czeizel, and four other pensioners, finding them through 
		cooperatives that help retirees get jobs.
 
 "In the past two years, we have employed a growing number of pensioners 
		because of the labor shortage," said Tamasi, whose company, SIXI 2000 
		Kft, had an average turnover of about 4 billion forints ($14.3 million) 
		in recent years.
 
 His pensioners are just five of the 75,000 that government figures show 
		are employed in Hungary, one of the poorest members of the EU. Budapest 
		hopes their ranks could double this year after tax cuts were offered in 
		January to make it cheaper for companies to hire them.
 
		 
		
 "When I retired, I promised myself never to work again, but 
		unfortunately necessity made me do it," Czeizel said, standing by a 
		computer she uses to check out large boxes of sweets. "I was having 
		financial difficulties on a daily basis."
 
 Official statistics showed 2.6 million Hungarians, or about a quarter of 
		the population, received a monthly pension of 117,485 forints ($420) on 
		average last year.
 
 If they go back to work, they get to keep both the pension and whatever 
		they earn. Hungary's average take-home pay for full-time workers is 
		217,600 forints.
 
 Czeizel's daughter and one of her grandchildren live in Hungary, but her 
		son moved to Briain in 2005, just after Hungary joined the EU and well 
		before the main wave of west-bound migration started in the first half 
		of this decade.
 
 "He moved abroad early because he saw no future for himself over here," 
		Czeizel said. "It seems like he has managed to take root, because they 
		have already bought a house. He is not planning to return."
 
		
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			A 65-year-old pensioner, Zsuzsanna Czeizel talks as she works in a 
			warehouse in Budapest, Hungary February 6, 2019. Picture taken in 
			February 6, 2019. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo 
            
			 
ECONOMIC MODEL NEARING ITS LIMITS
 Prime Minister Viktor Orban, whose government has refused to take in immigrants 
from the Middle East and Asia over fears of a lasting change to Hungary's 
cultural and ethnic make-up, has said the country has effectively run out of 
workers.
 
"Even in the longer run ... being the size that we are, the number of people 
willing and able to work in Hungary will remain between 4.5 million and 5 
million," Orban told a news conference last month.
 Vacancies posted on the Hungarian jobs board profession.hu already reflect a 
degree of desperation by some businesses. A number of openings are aimed at 
"career starters, experienced professionals, or even pensioners."
 
 Discount supermarket chain Penny Market posted warehousing jobs targeting 
pensioners last month. The Hungarian unit of the freight transport company Rail 
Cargo Group was looking for engine drivers, including pensioners willing to work 
part-time.
 
Companies in the nearby Czech Republic, which has the EU's tightest labor market 
and is a model for Orban because of its ultra-low jobless rate, are having 
problems, too.
 "I've basically had to beg to get a welder out of retirement and back to work," 
said Pavel Bouska, the owner of Vafo Praha, a maker of pet food.
 
 "It is also a problem of disappearing people with the required skills," Bouska 
said. Wages for technically skilled workers were soaring because younger people 
wanted other kinds of jobs, he said.
 
 Magdalena Rokonai's company employs about a dozen pensioners in a call center in 
the eastern Hungarian town of Miskolc, doing phone surveys for market research 
companies and pollsters. She says the labor market has been getting increasingly 
difficult.
 
 "Gone are the days when employers dictated unilaterally, saying either you can 
do it like we want, or we are very sorry," Rokonai said. "Oh, so you can come 
and work for two hours? Hooray! When can you start?"
 
 (Reporting by Gergely Szakacs and Krisztina Fenyo; additional reporting by 
Alicja Ptak, Jan Lopatka, Tatiana Jancarikova, Luiza Ilie and Radu-Sorin 
Marinas; editing by Larry King)
 
				 
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