Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law

On October 28, 2020, the European Commission published a Proposal for Directive 2020/0310 on adequate minimum wages in the European Union. The project was expected and the result is both ambitious and modest. Ambitious because the Commission calls for the determination of criteria to define an “adeq...

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Main Author: Thomas Pasquier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2021-07-01
Series:Italian Labour Law e-Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://illej.unibo.it/article/view/13373
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spelling doaj-e1bb76f823a648f0bff18d6dbb201fb32021-07-29T12:10:15ZengUniversity of BolognaItalian Labour Law e-Journal1561-80482021-07-01141778910.6092/issn.1561-8048/1337311689Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French lawThomas Pasquier0University Lumière Lyon 2On October 28, 2020, the European Commission published a Proposal for Directive 2020/0310 on adequate minimum wages in the European Union. The project was expected and the result is both ambitious and modest. Ambitious because the Commission calls for the determination of criteria to define an “adequate minimum wage” or “decency threshold”: reality of purchasing power, general level of wages and their distribution, average wage increases, labour productivity. To achieve this result, the project intends to promote the action of the social partners ant the lever or collective bargaining. But the project is also modest because the difficulty lies in avoiding the opposition of Member States that would result from their legal competence in determining wages and representing workers in collective bargaining. The drafting of the proposal is both cautious and often not very restrictive. The impact on French law will undoubtedly be relative, as the French tradition of collective bargaining on the minimum wage seems both well anchored in the national landscape and more demanding than the elements delivered by the proposal. France, however, was arguably not the core target of the minimum wage proposal.https://illej.unibo.it/article/view/13373proposal for a directiveminimum wageadequate minimum wagethreshold of decencysocial partnerscollective bargainingsubsidiarity principlefrench law
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Pasquier
spellingShingle Thomas Pasquier
Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
Italian Labour Law e-Journal
proposal for a directive
minimum wage
adequate minimum wage
threshold of decency
social partners
collective bargaining
subsidiarity principle
french law
author_facet Thomas Pasquier
author_sort Thomas Pasquier
title Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
title_short Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
title_full Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
title_fullStr Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
title_full_unstemmed Proposal for a Directive on adequate minimum wages in the European Union: a look at French law
title_sort proposal for a directive on adequate minimum wages in the european union: a look at french law
publisher University of Bologna
series Italian Labour Law e-Journal
issn 1561-8048
publishDate 2021-07-01
description On October 28, 2020, the European Commission published a Proposal for Directive 2020/0310 on adequate minimum wages in the European Union. The project was expected and the result is both ambitious and modest. Ambitious because the Commission calls for the determination of criteria to define an “adequate minimum wage” or “decency threshold”: reality of purchasing power, general level of wages and their distribution, average wage increases, labour productivity. To achieve this result, the project intends to promote the action of the social partners ant the lever or collective bargaining. But the project is also modest because the difficulty lies in avoiding the opposition of Member States that would result from their legal competence in determining wages and representing workers in collective bargaining. The drafting of the proposal is both cautious and often not very restrictive. The impact on French law will undoubtedly be relative, as the French tradition of collective bargaining on the minimum wage seems both well anchored in the national landscape and more demanding than the elements delivered by the proposal. France, however, was arguably not the core target of the minimum wage proposal.
topic proposal for a directive
minimum wage
adequate minimum wage
threshold of decency
social partners
collective bargaining
subsidiarity principle
french law
url https://illej.unibo.it/article/view/13373
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