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Finland: Operating a Business
Legal Forms of Companies | The Active Population in Figures | Working Conditions | The Cost of Labor | Management of Human Resources
| Types of Companies and Capital (Max/Min) | Number of Partners/Shareholders and Liability |
|
The Sole Proprietorship (Toiminimi)
|
1 partner
|
|
Co-operative
|
Minimum 3 founders
|
|
General partnership (Avoin yhtiö, Ay)
|
Minimum 2 general partners
|
|
Limited partnership (Kommandiittiyhtiö, Ky)
|
Minimum 1 general partner + 1 limited partner
|
|
Private limited company (Osakeyhtiö, Oy)
|
Minimum 1 person
|
|
Public limited company (Julkinen osakeyhtiö, Oyj)
|
Minimum 1 person
|
| Setting Up a Company | Finland | OECD |
| Procedures (number) | 3.00 | 5.60 |
| Time (days) | 14.00 | 13.80 |
Source: Doing Business.
| 2010 | |
| Labor Force | 2,680,000 |
Source: CIA - The world factbook
| 2009 | 2010 | |
| Total activity rate | - | 60.90% |
| Men activity rate | 64.90% | - |
| Women activity rate | 57.00% | - |
Source: UN - United Nations
| Employed Persons, by Occupation (% of Total Labor Force) | 2005 |
| Agriculture and forestry | 4.8% |
| Manufacturing | 19.2% |
| Construction | 6.6% |
| Trade, hotels and restaurants | 15.7% |
| Transport and communications | 7.2% |
| Activities auxiliary to financial intermediation, insurance and business services | 13.4% |
| Public and other services | 32.9% |
| Industry unknown | 0.2% |
| Total | 100.0% |
Source:
Statistics Finland
There are two complementary pension systems in Finland: earnings-related pensions linked to past employment and national pensions linked to residence in Finland. Both systems include a wide range of retirement benefits for specific contingencies:
- old-age / early old-age pension;
- disability pension / rehabilitation subsidy;
- individual early retirement pension (for persons born before 1944);
- unemployment pension (for persons born before 1950).
The employer must not terminate an indefinitely valid employment contract without proper and weighty reason. Such reasons can be:
- serious breach or neglect of obligations of the employee, or such essential changes in the conditions necessary for working related to the employee’s person;
- or the work has diminished substantially and permanently for financial or production-related reasons, or for reasons arising from reorganization of the employer’s operations.
If the matter cannot be solved between the employees and employer, negotiations will then continue between the employer and the shop steward representing the trade union. If the negotiations still do not produce a solution, the matter will be forwarded to be negotiated between the employer and the wage and salary earners’ unions. If no solution can be found at this level, either one of the unions may take the matter to the labor Court.
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Last Updates: May 2012