The football club Schaffhausen only pays Yakin CHF 2,000 a month.
—-
—
2.5
VIEW revealed: Hakan Yakin (42), as assistant coach of FC Schaffhausen, gets most of his wages from the unemployment fund.
—-
Keystone
—
3.5
The RAV pays the difference to the insured salary, but calculates CHF 3,800 instead of CHF 2,000. This corresponds to the industry standard. Even so, Yakin still receives over 6,000 francs from the unemployment fund.
—-
fresh focus
—
4.5
A RAV consultant is now unpacking: “Yakin is still getting too much!” With a realistic assessment, he shouldn’t get more than CHF 2,000 a month from the till.
—-
TOTO MARTI
—
5.5
Yakin could easily work 100 percent instead of being paid for by the general public, said the RAV consultant.
—-
—-
The second division FC Schaffhausen affords the former Nati player Hakan Yakin (42) as an assistant coach. The top-class commitment is financed by the unemployment fund.
–
On Thursday, BLICK revealed: The club hired Yakin to 70 percent and only paid him CHF 2,000 a month. As a part-time unemployed person, Yakin is entitled to the difference to the insured salary. In the case of the former GC assistant coach, this is the maximum amount of CHF 12,350 per month.
–
6000 francs from the general public
As a family man, Yakin is entitled to 80 percent of this sum, which is 9,880 francs. However, he does not receive the difference of CHF 2,000 and 9,880 from the unemployment fund in the canton of Zurich, where Yakin lives. The health insurance company argues that the wages customary in the industry are over CHF 2,000; she puts it at around 4,000 francs. Even so, the coach, who has earned millions in his career, usually receives around 6,000 francs a month – paid by the general public. That is shocking. But is it at least correct?
–
“No,” says Peter Küng * (47), a long-standing personnel consultant at RAV Schaffhausen. “This is shown by a quick check at the salarium.” With the help of this federal statistical wage calculator, Küng calculated the wages of an assistant coach in the Challenge League, which is customary in the industry.
–
The salarium shows that around 4,000 francs for a 70 percent workload are set far too low. “5600 francs are the bare minimum,” emphasizes Küng. “If you add the market peculiarities and the name Hakan Yakin, the salary should not be less than CHF 8,000.” If the RAV of the canton of Zurich expected this number, Yakin would not get around CHF 6,000 a month, but less than CHF 2,000. Küng: “Yakin is collecting too much.”
–
“It is also shocking that, as a part-time unemployed person, he does not have to endeavor to find another job like everyone else,” says the personnel consultant. The suggestion that there are only a few jobs in this industry is absurd. Yakin can work with another club at any time to 30 percent in the training area. Just: “Then of course he would no longer receive any money from the unemployment fund because he would be 100 percent employed.”
–
No exception for Yakin
One thing is certain: after one year, the RAV must ensure that Yakin looks for a job outside of this sector. Such an expansion of the job search is required by all job seekers, says Küng. No exception should be made here. “Yakin can easily find a job as a sports equipment seller.”
–
However, there is an alternative. “It is commonplace in the footballbusiness,” says Küng. It is no coincidence that Yakin’s contract runs for a year – exactly as long as the period before he has to apply to become a sports goods seller. «He will then receive a better-paid contract. After six months, he will be reduced to part-time again and will only pay him another CHF 2,000 for it – and the game will start again. »