Article contents
Freedom to conduct a business and EU labour law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 March 2018
Abstract
Critical-contextual analysis of case law of the European Court of Justice on employers’ contractual freedom – Fundamental right to be immunised against the alleged disproportional protection enjoyed by employees – Progressive ideological overthrow of the original constitutional assumptions of the founding treaties – Prominent example of ‘displacement of social Europe’ – Court of Justice’s case law on the relationship between freedom to conduct a business and labour law – Neoliberal understanding of the freedom of enterprise – Alternative interpretation of Article 16 of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights
- Type
- The Displacement of Social Europe – Special Section
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- Copyright
- Copyright © The Authors 2018
Footnotes
University of Perugia.
References
1 AG Wahl, para. 1 of the conclusions delivered on 9 June 2016 in ECJ 21 December 2016, Case C-201/15, Anonymi Geniki Etairia Tsimenton Iraklis (AGET Iraklis) v Ypourgos Ergasias, Koinonikis Asfalisis kai Koinonikis Allilengyis.
2 ECJ 11 December 2007, Case C-438/05, International Transport Workers’ Federation and Finnish Seamen’s Union v Viking Line ABP and OÜ Viking Line Eesti; ECJ 18 December 2007, Case C-341/05, Laval un Partneri Ltd v Svenska Byggnadsarbetareförbundet, Svenska Byggnadsarbetareförbundets avdelning 1, Byggettan and Svenska Elektrikerförbundet; ECJ 3 April 2008, Case C-346/06, Dirk Rüffert v Land Niedersachsen; ECJ 19 June 2008, Case C-319/06, Commission of the European Communities v Grand Duchy of Luxemburg.
3 See Ruggie, J.G., ‘International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order’, 36(2) International Organization (1982) p. 379 Google Scholar, who borrowed from the classic economic sociology of Polanyi, K., The Great Transformation. The Political and Economic Origins of Our Time (Farrar & Rinehart 1944)Google Scholar (Beacon Press 2001 with a preface by J.E. Stiglitz and an introduction by F. Block). Among EU labour law scholars, see e.g. Giubboni, S., Social Rights and Market Freedom in the European Constitution (Cambridge University Press 2006)Google Scholar; Schiek, D., Economic and Social Integration: The Challenge for EU Constitutional Law (Edward Elgar 2012)Google Scholar; Ashiagbor, D., ‘Unravelling the Embedded Liberal Bargain: Labour and Social Welfare Law in the Context of EU Market Integration’, 19(3) ELJ (2013) p. 303 Google Scholar.
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5 Now Art. 34 TFEU.
6 AG Tesauro, para. 1 of the conclusions delivered on 27 October 1993 in ECJ 15 December 1993, Case C-292/92, Ruth Hünermund v Landesapothekerkammer Baden-Württemberg. Similarly, AG Van Gerven, conclusions delivered on 29 June 1989 in ECJ 23 November 1989, Case C-145/88, Torfaen Borough Council v B & Q plc.
7 C. Kilpatrick, ‘The Displacement of Social Europe’, introduction to this special issue.
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10 ECJ 17 December 1970, Case 11/70, Internationale Handelsgesellschaft mbH v Einfuhr- und Vorratsstelle für Getreide und Futtermittel.
11 Cf Usai, A., ‘The Freedom to Conduct a Business in the EU, Its Limitations and Its Role in the European Legal Order: A New Engine for Deeper and Stronger Economic, Social, and Political Integration’, 14(9) German Law Journal (2013) p. 1867 Google Scholar.
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15 This refers to the famous judgments delivered by the Court in ECJ 11 July 1974, Case 8/74, Procureur du Roi v Benoît and Gustave Dassonville, and ECJ 20 February 1979, Case 120/78, Rewe-Zentral AG v Bundesmonopolverwaltung für Branntwein, respectively.
16 This aspect is very well described by Syrpis, P. and Novitz, T., ‘The EU Internal Market and Domestic Labour Law: Looking beyond Autonomy’, in A. Bogg et al. (eds.), The Autonomy of Labour Law (Hart Publishing 2015) p. 291 Google Scholar.
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22 ECJ 18 July 2013, Case C-426/11, Mark Alemo-Herron v Parkwood Leisure Ltd. Cf Weatherill, S., ‘Use and Abuse of the EU’s Charter of Fundamental Rights: On the Improper Veneration of Freedom of Contract’, 10(1) ERCL (2014) p. 167 Google Scholar. See also Prassl, J., ‘Freedom of Contract as a General Principle of EU Law? Transfer of Undertakings and the Protection of Employer Rights in EU Labour Law’, 42(4) ILJ (2013) p. 434 Google Scholar.
23 As noted by Christodoulidis, E., ‘The European Court of Justice and the “Total Market” Thinking’, 14(10) German Law Journal (2013) p. 2005 at p. 2006Google Scholar, ‘the neoliberal move […] collapses the competition – between rights and freedoms – and […] smoothes over their friction by elevating market access as underlying premise, underwriting and providing the measure of the “reconciliation” of social rights and economic freedoms on a common register’.
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25 Azoulai, L., ‘The Court of Justice and the Social Market Economy: The Emergence of an Ideal and the Conditions for Its Realization’, 45(5) CMLRev (2008) p. 1335 at p. 1345Google Scholar.
26 In the Italian system, the seminal distinction between damage to production and damage to productivity applies. The distinction was introduced in Italian Court of Cassation, judgment No. 711 dated 30 January 1980, which represents ‘a true watershed in the orientation of the case law on the subject’: G. Giugni, Diritto sindacale, updated by L. Bellardi, P. Curzio, and V. Leccese (Cacucci 2014) p. 279.
27 Cf Portuese, A., ‘The Principle of Proportionality as a Principle of Efficiency’, 19(5) ELJ (2013) p. 612 Google Scholar.
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29 Originally published in 1933, it has been recently republished in English: Heller, H., ‘Authoritarian Liberalism?’, 21(3) ELJ (2015) p. 295 Google Scholar.
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34 ECJ 18 July 2013, supra n. 22, paras. 33-35.
35 Cf Weatherill, supra n. 22, p. 172.
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38 Hesselink, M.W., ‘The Justice Dimensions of the Relationship between Fundamental Rights and Private Law’, 24(3/4) ERPL (2016) p. 425 at p. 447Google Scholar, who obviously refers to U.S. Supreme Court, Lochner v New York, 198 U.S. 45 (1905). For an analogous criticism, cf Giubboni, S., Diritto del lavoro europeo. Una introduzione critica (Cedam 2017) p. 79 Google Scholar. The implicit and perhaps unconscious criticism of Lochnerism by the Luxembourg Court will be dealt with in the concluding paragraph.
39 Cf ECJ 27 April 2017, Joined Cases C-680/15 and C-681/15, Asklepios Kliniken Langen-Seligenstadt GmbH v Ivan Felja and Asklepios Dienstleistungsgesellschaft mbH v Vittoria Graf, which also deals with the question of whether Article 3 of Directive 2001/23 allows national legislation (in the case at hand, the German Civil Code) to authorise the incorporation of dynamic clauses into an employment contract, i.e. clauses referring dynamically to collective agreements even after the date of the transfer of the undertaking.
40 ECJ 27 April 2017, supra n. 39, para. 19.
41 ECJ 27 April 2017, supra n. 39, para. 21.
42 ECJ 27 April 2017, supra n. 39, para. 22.
43 ECJ 27 April 2017, supra n. 39, para. 23 (emphasis added).
44 AG Wahl, supra n. 1, para. 27.
45 AG Wahl, supra n. 1, para. 32.
46 ECJ 21 December 2016, Case C-201/15, Anonymi Geniki Etairia Tsimenton Iraklis (AGET Iraklis) v Ypourgos Ergasias, Koinonikis Asfalisis kai Koinonikis Allilengyis, para. 35.
47 ECJ 21 December 2016, supra n. 46, paras. 36, 37, and 38.
48 See AG Wahl, supra n. 1, para. 75.
49 Cf Baylos Grau, A. and Pérez Rey, J., El despido o la violencia del poder privado [On dismissal, or on the violence of power] (Editorial Trotta 2009)Google Scholar.
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51 Collins, H., ‘The Impossible Necessity of European Labour Law’, in S. Muller et al. (eds.), The Law of Future and the Future of Law (Torkel Opsahl Academic EPublisher 2011) p. 453 at p. 464Google Scholar.
52 See e.g. Hesselink, supra n. 38, p. 447; and Eliasoph, I.H., ‘A “Switch in Time” for the European Community? Lochner Discourse and the Recalibration of Economic and Social Rights in Europe’, 14(3) CJEL (2008) p. 467 Google Scholar.
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54 Sunstein, supra n. 53, p. 874.
55 For a more explicit dissertation, cf Justices J.M. Harlan, E.D. White, and W.R. Day, dissenting, 198 U.S. 65 (1905), in U.S. Supreme Court, supra n. 38.
56 Justice O.W. Holmes Jr., dissenting, 198 U.S. 75 (1905), in U.S. Supreme Court, supra n. 38.
57 Joerges, C., ‘A New Alliance of De-legalisation and Legal Formalism? Reflections on Responses to the Social Deficit of the European Integration Project’, 19(3) Law and Critique (2008) p. 235 at p. 252Google Scholar.
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