Updated
Updated · Human Resource Executive® · May 15
Organizations Face 20-Country Hiring Risks as Global Labor Rules Tighten
Updated
Updated · Human Resource Executive® · May 15

Organizations Face 20-Country Hiring Risks as Global Labor Rules Tighten

4 articles · Updated · Human Resource Executive® · May 15
  • International hiring is exposing organizations to rising legal risk as remote work and global payroll tools make cross-border recruiting easier but labor rules shift quickly across jurisdictions.
  • Worker classification remains a first-line hazard: mislabeling contractors can trigger back taxes, payroll liabilities, benefits costs and penalties, and some countries require a local entity or employer-of-record setup for direct hires.
  • Compensation and separation rules add another layer, with minimum wages, overtime, bonuses, paid leave, notice periods and severance obligations often exceeding U.S. employers’ assumptions about at-will work.
  • Europe, Latin America, Canada and parts of Asia are highlighted as especially demanding or fast-evolving regions, with strong protections around hours, privacy, benefits and dismissal procedures.
  • For companies scaling across 20-plus countries, the recommended response is regular compliance reviews, local advisers, legal-update monitoring and documentation that keeps contracts and policies aligned with changing law.
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