Fight against a shortage of skilled workers: Without employee participation, it will be difficult for startups

Good staff is also rare in the start-up scene.

Fight against a shortage of skilled workers: Without employee participation, it will be difficult for startups

Good staff is also rare in the start-up scene. As a solution, startups see better opportunities for employees to participate in the success of growth companies - such as an IPO or sale. That could be quite lucrative for employees.

In the fight against the shortage of skilled workers, the start-up industry is demanding more attractive rules for employee participation from politicians. Despite all the crises, startups are planning an average of nine new hires, but the search for personnel is becoming increasingly difficult, according to the tenth "German Startup Monitor", presented by the Federal Association of German Startups in Berlin.

The shortage of skilled workers among startups has worsened again and is a key challenge for almost 35 percent of companies. Almost 2,000 German startups took part in the survey in cooperation with the auditing company PwC and the University of Duisburg-Essen. In the study a year ago, almost 27 percent of startups identified the shortage of skilled workers as a key problem; in 2020 it was only 17 percent.

According to the study, 92 percent of start-ups with more than 25 employees demanded more attractive regulations for employee participation from the legislator as a strategy against the shortage of skilled workers. "Germany is in last place in Europe when it comes to the conditions for employee participation. This is a serious disadvantage for the German start-up location," said the association's managing director, Franziska Teubert. In the global competition for talent, the industry is urgently dependent on employee participation.

Employee participation, for example through company shares, can be lucrative for employees of startups. Because the prospect of a later IPO or the sale of a start-up to investors ("exit") for a lot of money offers employees a great incentive. But the rules on employee participation that came into force a year ago are impractical, complains Teubert, managing director of the startup association.

Previous proposals by Federal Finance Minister Christian Lindner are also insufficient. Employees with company shares are still threatened with taxation, even if no money has been paid for an exit. This taxation of imaginary income happens when you change jobs or after twelve years at the latest. In addition, larger startups would be completely excluded from the rules. Even an increase in the annual tax allowances does not help startups, because it is about one-off proceeds in the event of an exit.

Teubert therefore called for a second attempt to improve the conditions for employee participation. Another lever in recruiting staff for the industry is to attract more women. According to the study, the proportion of female founders has risen from almost 18 to 20 percent, but it is still low. At the employee level, the proportion of women was significantly higher at 37 percent, but also below the value in the German working population (almost 47 percent).

This is also due to the fact that starting a business and having a family are difficult to reconcile. While 61 percent of founders stated that they were satisfied with the compatibility of both, this was only 51 percent of female founders. The workload in the industry is also relatively high: founders work an average of 55 hours a week, according to the start-up monitor.