7. Zero Hours Contracts
What is a Zero Hours Contract?
Zero hours contracts is not a legal term. It is use to describe a certain type of agreement between where the employer may ask an individual to perform work but there is no set minimum number of hours.
The terms of the contract or agreement will provide what pay the individual will get if he or she does work and will deal with the circumstances in which work may be offered (and, possibly, turned down).
Zero hours contracts can provide a level of flexibility for both employers and employees. They have also been criticised for being open to abuse by employers as they offer no certainty to the individual regarding work and therefore earnings.
From the...
On this page
Zero hours contracts can provide a level of flexibility for both employers and employees. They have also been criticised for being open to abuse by employers as they offer no certainty to the individual regarding work and pay.
Upgrade to continue reading this content and gain access to our Premium content
Sign up for £24.99 / month + VAT
Get access to Premium Member content on YourHR.guide by signing up today!
- Access all templates
- Get all policy documents
- Access all guidance
Already a member?
Login to view