Outsourcing law in Brazil


The outsourcing law in Brazil, or Law Nº 13,429/2017, is a Brazilian law sanctioned on March 31, 2017 by president Michel Temer that allows companies to hire outsourced employees to work on primary activities, instead of secondary activities. Until then, there was no specific legislation regarding outsourcing, but decisions of the Labor Justice determined that outsourcing should only be allowed for secondary activities.
In the Chamber of Deputies, the bill 4,302 of 1998 was approved on March 22 of that same year.
The main proposal was kept. The bill also determined that, in cases of labor actions, the outsourced company ought to pay for the rights questioned in justice, if there is condemnation. The main vetoed part allowed the extension of the 270-day term of temporary employment. According to the government, that would allow the possibility of indefinite extension of the temporary employment contract. The other two vetoes, according to the government, were relative to laws there were already in the Constitution.

Reception

Against

The leader of the Socialism and Liberty Party in the Chamber of Deputies, Glauber Braga, declared that "it's not about granting rights to the outsourced worker. It's about outsourcing all and any activity of the labor market, worsening labor relations and worsening rights". Moreover, the Anamatra saw the liberation of limitless outsourcing as unconstitutional, because the constitution defines a worker as a person not in those conditions.

For

The National Conference of Industry said that the separation between secondary and primary work is only applied in Brazil and brings legal uncertainty. "The dichotomy between secondary and primary, without a clear definition of what is one and what is the other, motivates conflicts and increases the distance between Brazil and other countries. Furthermore, the choice of what to outsource must be of the company itself", stated Sylvia Lorena, executive-manager of CNI.