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. 2018 Dec 4;52(1):14. doi: 10.1186/s12651-018-0247-7

Table 5.

Use of STW by stratum

Sector Size class Population Sample Extrapol. to population
All sample STW firms STW employees
N L n l nSTW lSTW Involved Saved Saved [% of l] Saved in L
2008–2009
 Manufacturing 5–19 268 2675 26 243 2 13 15 4 1.6 44
 Manufacturing 20–49 99 3079 10 343 2 36 27 5 1.5 45
 Manufacturing 50–199 82 7920 16 1743 4 523 305 70 4.0 318
 Manufacturing 200+ 32 23,399 4 1159 2 631 180 50 4.3 1009
 Construction 5–19 819 8336 47 547 1 5 6 4 0.7 61
 Construction 20–49 306 9276 59 1829 2 69 35 6 0.3 30
 Trade 5–19 1257 11,246 53 562 1 8 4 2 0.4 40
 Trade 20–49 226 7008 42 1314 1 38 3 3 0.2 16
 Trade 50–199 76 5500 14 1228 1 68 50 10 0.8 45
 Business services 20–49 195 5759 41 1398 2 51 45 13 0.9 54
2010–2013
 Manufacturing 5–19 193 1968 26 243 2 38 26 5 2.1 40
 Manufacturing 20–49 91 2883 10 343 1 43 20 5 1.5 42
 Manufacturing 50–199 72 7332 16 1743 7 807 433 86 4.9 362
 Construction 5–19 705 7092 47 547 1 14 7 7 1.3 91
 Construction 20–49 287 8854 59 1829 2 80 24 9 0.5 44
 Construction 50–199 121 10,612 20 1587 1 72 65 1 0.1 7
 Business services 20–49 419 12,865 41 1398 1 20 20 5 0.4 46

N and L denote the total no. of firms and employees in the target firm population; n and l denote the total no. of firms and employees in the sample; nSTW and lSTW denote the number of firms and employees with short-time work. The data for the firm population refers to end 2008 and end 2013. Thus, the number of employees in short-time work can exceed the number of total employees in a firm. Size categories based on 2013 employment figures