• Adam
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    111 year ago

    In UK nomenclature being made redundant, rounds of redundancies, and layoffs are used interchangeably. A percentage of the workforce loses their job because of circumstances outside their control.

    To be fired/sacked though, that very specifically means you did bad; you failed to do your job.

    It’s probably similar in Australia?

    • @[email protected]
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      31 year ago

      Tbf, I didn’t see the .au in the URL.

      Good point on the distinction between layoff and firing though. Although I still dislike “redundant” as a synonym for the former.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 year ago

        As an American, I also don’t like the term “layoff” because it sounds temporary. I prefer the term “downsize” when referring to groups of people, or “let go” for individuals.

    • @MurrayL
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      31 year ago

      This. There’s a legal distinction between redundancy and other forms of termination that creates some important practical differences.

      You can’t just fire people without cause (e.g. gross misconduct) in the UK; it has to go through a redundancy process, and those affected get a compensation package from the company.