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On 22nd October, the European Labour Authority (ELA) will hold the fourth meeting of the Posting 360, the Forum on the Posting of Workers. The meeting will mainly focus on the Commission Report on the application and implementation of the Directive 2018/957 concerning the posting of workers in the framework of the provision of services. Ahead of the meeting, we would like to share our views on the report and the proposed further action.
We welcome the report and its main conclusion which states that the European Commission “does not see any need to propose amendments to this Directive or to Directive 96/71/EC at this stage”. But we observe that companies are still facing many problems and bureaucratic burdens when posting employees to other Member States. Therefore, we fully agree with the European Commission that there is still a lot of work to be done to ensure the full transposition and improve the implementation of the Directive. Our organisations and the employers we represent are fully committed to this objective.
In the light of the new European Commission’s priorities on implementation and simplification, we do believe that the priority should be put on enforcing the rules stemming from the Directive rather than on introducing new ones. The latter would create more administrative burden, sometimes even uncertainty and confusion for all actors involved in the posting of workers. In this respect, progressing on the revision of regulation 883/04 remains crucial.
We recognise that the posting of third country nationals (TCNs) is a growing trend and agree that it is of a crucial importance to ensure legally sound and orderly process of entering the EU by the TCNs before they start to move across borders. However, this is the responsibility of migration offices of the Member States in line with the applicable EU and/or national migration schemes, not of posting companies. Once they entered the EU and are legally residing and working in an EU Member State, they should be treated as regular posted workers in a single market logic and be the subject of the same rules and effective visa procedures where applicable. We therefore see no need to over-regulate the posting of TCNs.
Furthermore, we would like to reiterate our support for the work of the ELA in this area and we welcome the possible measures proposed by the European Commission in the report, in particular:
Finally, we would like to recall that we represent millions of companies which are complying with the applicable legislation. They should not be held responsible for the misbehaviour of few employers. At national and European level, social partners and companies are innovating and taking several initiatives to improve enforcement of the legislation. Sector-specific challenges are best addressed sector by sector from a bottom-up approach taking into account national frameworks. One of the sectoral specific examples are social ID cards that function well in the construction sector in several Member States. Another is to use the benefits of cross-border provision of services in the temporary agency work sector. The revised Posting of Workers Directive extends the protection granted by the Directive on temporary agency work to posted temporary agency workers, which has been correctly transposed. Improving access to information for posting temporary agency workers via Single National Websites would be essential.
Links:
[1] https://www.fiec.eu/