This
week the posts refer to European Union law and will continue exploring the
concept of “worker.” On Friday, the post introduced key European Union treaty
law articles. Today, the focus will be on the interpretation of the concept of
“worker” by the European Court of Justice.
The
TFEU does not define the concept of “worker.” T.F.E.U. The relevant secondary
legislation follows a similar fashion. For example, the Regulation 1612/68 E.C. art.1 (1) refers
to “worker” as a national of a Member State and the Directive 2004/38 E.C. art.7 (1) characterized a “worker” as
a Union citizen.
Relevant ECJ case law
Unger (75/63): a) “Worker”
is a Union concept and has autonomous Union meaning.
That
is because “if the definition of this
term were a matter for the competence of national law, it would therefore be
possible for each Member State to modify the meaning of the concept of “migrant
worker.”
Lawrie-Blum (66/85): an individual is a “worker” if he/she:
a) Performs a service of economic value.
b) Under direction of another.
c) In return for measure of remuneration.
Levin (53/81): a “worker” must be engaged in a “genuine and effective economic activity.” “Work”
must not be “marginal and purely ancillary.” Whether the
test is satisfied is a matter for the respective national court.
Unger (75/63), Lawrie-Blum (66/85) and Levin
(53/81)
are the crucial judgments in which the European Court of Justice defines and
characterizes the Union concept of “worker.” There are other judgments that are
relevant to specific situations. For example:
Kempf (139/85): an individual
is still a “worker” if he/she performs a “genuine and effective” economic
activity even though earned less than the minimum level and sought to
supplement his/her income by State benefits.
Trojani (C-456/02): an
individual who performs various jobs for approximately 30 hours per week as
part of personal socio-occupational reintegration programme in return for board,
lodging and “pocket money.”
It is up to national court to decide whether work
constitutes a “real and effective” economic activity.
Raulin (C-357/89): The duration of economic activity irrelevant. For
example, zero hours’ contract. The
nature of work, rather than extent, is the determining factor.
There are many other judgments by the European
Court of Justice relevant to the concept of “worker” and particular situations.
This post only intended to highlight the fact that the concept of “worker” is
not part of the European Union legislation but jurisprudential creation. Therefore, the concept itself depends upon
interpretation (at times narrow, at times broad). Tomorrow, the post will
present secondary legislation relevant to the condition of “worker.”
Monday 4th March 2019
Jorge Emilio Núñez
Twitter: @London1701
No comments:
Post a Comment