News Flash

Relaxation of temporary work restrictions

The Italian Government has approved a decree that is designed to relax the 2003 Biagi law in respect to the hiring of temporary workers. Currently, temporary staffing is only permitted for technical reasons, reasons to do with “production and organisation”

Slow take up of IORP schemes

The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) has published its 2011 report on the development of the cross-border activity of the Institutions for Occupational Retirement Provision (IORPs).

Following the implementation of Directive 2003/41/EC many EU member states have opened

Failure to notify grounds for discrimination

The German Federal Court has ordered an employer to pay compensation to a job applicant who claimed that he had been turned down for a job because of his disability.

The employer in question had failed to notify the German

Dismissal for personal use of company IT systems

The Spanish Supreme Court has ruled that it was lawful to dismiss an employee for using her work computer for personal purposes.

The Court found that as the employer had a clear policy in place which stated that employees were

Voting entitlements in social elections

The Belgian Federal Public Employment Service has recently issued (non-binding) guidance on to what extent temporary workers should be taken into account when determining the number of mandates in the forthcoming social elections.

It has confirmed that it will only

Major employment and labour law amendments

The Spanish government has passed the most significant changes to its labour law seen in decades. The legislation is set to encourage employer flexibility, changing the rules on dismissals, contracting and collective agreements. For a more detailed explanation of the

Employers may require reasonable changes in work hours

The French Supreme Court has given a surprisingly liberal ruling in a case where the working locations and hours of an employee were unilaterally modified by her employer. The employee concerned had been required to work at two sites in

Removal of reporting requirement

Employers in Italy are no longer required to inform their Provincial Labour Office (Direzione Provinciale del Lavoro, DPL) about any changes from a full-time to a part-time employment contract (Law No. 183/2011). A written agreement between the parties

Social security changes for 2012

The French law on the financing of social security for 2012 has been published in the Official Journal. There are a number of important changes this year:

* The rate of the so-called employer ‘forfait social’ contribution is increased from

Extended parental leave delayed for further year

The UK government has confirmed that it will postpone the implementation of the increase in parental leave required by the EU Parental Leave Directive. This change will increase the rights to unpaid parental leave, for those with a child under

41% increase in minimum wage this year

Russia’s ruling “United Russia” party is planning to introduce substantial increases in the national minimum wage in order to bring it more into line with the official subsistence level. Parliament plans to follow a three-step schedule this year with the

Harassment of a superior

The Criminal Chamber of the French Supreme Court has ruled that an employee may be convicted of harassment under articles L1152-1 and 222-33-2 of the French Labour Code even if the individual concerned is actually the subordinate of the victim.

Referendum on the world’s highest minimum wage

Swiss trade unions have gained the necessary 100,000+ signatures to require the Federal Chancery to call a referendum on a national minimum wage of 22 francs (18.2 euros) per hour. If supported by the Swiss population, this measure would raise

Imprisonment and fines for managers in corporate spying case

The Hungarian Metropolitan Court has ordered over one year’s imprisonment and 10 million euros in damages in a case concerning industrial espionage. Former managers of a Hungarian pharmaceutical company were found to have sold company files containing restricted trade and

New EU rules for handling personal information

The European Commission is set to propose changes to the EU Data Protection Directive that will dictate how employers handle personal information. The proposals include, for the first time, a single set of privacy standards for all 27 EU countries.