Data Exclusif mind RH analysis – Initial findings from CSRD social indicators European legislation EU/Agreement on new regulations for social security system coordination as regards unemployment compensation and posted workers. On 19 March 2019, a provisional agreement was concluded between the European Parliament, the Council of Ministers, and the European Commission that notably improves the portability of jobseekers’ rights. Effectively the European Parliament press statement underlines that jobseekers will be able to avail of ‘exported’ unemployment benefit payments (i.e. paid by the jobseeker’s former country) for a period of six months, instead of three currently, and the EU Parliament also indicates that the EU Member State making those payments can extend them until the end of their term. Furthermore, once a worker works for a continuous period of one month in a new EU Member State then the worker can benefit from the full length of the insurance periods secured in another EU Member State. The tricky issue of border workers was solved via the principle of unemployment payments being paid, for a longer period than 6 months, by the EU Member State within which the work was being carried out, once the work itself was carried out for a continuous 6-month period. Currently such unemployment payments would be paid by the State of residency. The EU Commission was proposing to shift this to the Member State within which the work was being carried out after 12 months of work. In addition, workers posted abroad for a maximum term of 24 months (and not replacing a previously posted worker) will remain insured within the EU Member State where the employer is legally established. In a bit to counter fraudulent activity these posted workers must have been insured for a least three months in the originating EU Member State before being posted abroad. In order for this provisional agreement to become definitive it must be adopted by both the EU Council and the EU Parliament, something which observers have said is not a ‘given’.
Réglementaire EU: omnibus bill stalls in parliament European legislation On 22 October, members of the European Parliament narrowly voted against a negotiating mandate that would have opened trilogue talks on the omnibus directive, which seeks to dilute the corporate sustainability reporting and due diligence directives (CSRD and CSDDD).…
Réglementaire EU: social partners once again divided on telework initiative European legislation Europe’s main social partners have published their contribution to the second phase of consultation on teleworking and the right to disconnect. In its response, the European Trade Union Confederation reiterates its commitment to a legally binding instrument to “protect workers”.…
EU: Omnibus Directive clears key milestone in European Parliament European legislation On 13 October, the European Parliament’s position on the Omnibus Directive was approved by its Committee on Legal Affairs by 17 votes to six. Regarding due diligence rules,…
Réglementaire EU: Parliament finally adopts revision of European Works Council Directive European legislation By 414 votes to 139, MEPs approved the revision of the European Works Council Directive presented by the European Commission in early 2024. “This is the culmination of a process that has taken nearly 16 years,…
Réglementaire EU: concerns mount around Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive European legislation With the European Parliament’s Legal Affairs Committee set to vote within days on the proposed omnibus directive, supporters of the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) are voicing concern over a new compromise that would raise the threshold to companies with more than 5,000 employees and €1.5 billion in revenue.…
EU: MEPs want to tackle the gender pay gap European legislation In 2023, women in the EU still earned on average 12% less per hour than men. In a report presented to the European Parliament’s Employment and Social Affairs Committee on 29 September,…
Réglementaire EU: Parliament calls for tougher regulation of traineeships European legislation Members of the European Parliament are seeking to strengthen the regulatory framework for professional traineeships — those not tied to university courses — beyond what the European Commission proposed in 2024.…
Réglementaire EU: MEPs want to use public procurement as a lever to improve job quality European legislation In an own-initiative report adopted on 9 September, members of the European Parliament’s Committee on Internal Market and Consumer Protection urged the Commission to reinforce social clauses in its forthcoming revision of the Public Procurement Directive.…
Réglementaire EU: CSRD social indicators set for major cut European legislation On 31 July 2025, the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG) unveiled proposals to revise mandatory reporting standards under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD). Coming after the postponement of application and raising of thresholds, this marks the third major scaling back of European companies’ social and environmental disclosure obligations.