Impacto sobre el trabajador de la obligación de registro horario a la luz de las primeras resoluciones judiciales

Since the entry into force of the Royal Decree-Law 8/2019, the 8th of March, of urgent social protection measures and measures to combat precarious working conditions during working hours, companies have been required to ensure the daily registration of working hours. The aim of this obligation i...

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Autor principal: Velasco Portero, María Teresa
Formato: Artículo
Idioma:Castellano
Publicado: 2020
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Acceso en línea:https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=7464158
Fuente:Temas laborales: Revista andaluza de trabajo y bienestar social, ISSN 0213-0750, Nº 151, 2020, pags. 343-353
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Sumario: Since the entry into force of the Royal Decree-Law 8/2019, the 8th of March, of urgent social protection measures and measures to combat precarious working conditions during working hours, companies have been required to ensure the daily registration of working hours. The aim of this obligation is to combat overtime fraud, allowing the administration to monitor the hours actually worked to verify that the legal and conventional limits are respected and that all overtime worked is remunerated. The measure has been questioned by employers and applauded by trade unions, but it is still too early to say whether it is actually achieving its objective. What can be observed is that it has also had the effect of shedding light on certain contractual breaches on the part of the worker, which have resulted in dismissals. The issues raised in this respect and the approach followed in the court resolutions in these first months of application of the rule are the subject of the present work