withoutaface said:
If the employee wants redundancy, they can negotiate it into the contract
What company is going to put redundancy entitlements into an employment contract when they don't have to?
and are you saying a company that already has its business dwindling and losing money should be forced to lose even more money through redundancy payments and potentially cost all five employees their jobs?
Thats exactly what I am saying.
Welcome to the real world where if you dig a hole, you must lay in it.
If a company goes belly-up, why should the employee suffer?
EDIT: Question: A senior employee decides that they don't need to work anymore, and want to retire. This causes the company great problems, having to replace them with someone completely inadequate to fill their shoes. Should this employee be able to quit at any time, and if so should they owe the company redundancy payments?
Thats not even an argument? It just shows your lack of understanding and quite possible lack of maturity.
When you leave a company you aren't making it redundant, it still operates and has a job to do?
And yes, given their specified notice (generally a month), an employee is free to leave their employment as they so wish.
Question for you: why is it the employee's problem that there is no one adequate to take over their position? Would that not be the fault of the company who have failed to train someone (because *shock horror*, there is always a possbility of someone deciding to leave the company)?