Europejska autonomiczna definicja pracownika i jej implikacje dla osób samozatrudnionych w sferze indywidualnego i zbiorowego prawa pracy
The European Autonomous Definition of a Worker and its Implications for the Self-Employed in the Sphere of Individual and Collective Labour Law
Author(s): Joanna UnterschützSubject(s): Economy, Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Human Resources in Economy, Labour and Social Security Law
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego
Keywords: employee; self-employed; bogus self-employment; collective labour law; European labour law
Summary/Abstract: Currently, there is no clear definition valid throughout Europe that makes a clear distinction between genuine self-employed workers who work independently of a contractor and false self-employed workers. The 2006 ILO Recommendation takes a broad approach to the concept of “employment relationship” to enable action to be taken against false self-employment. In determining whether an employment relationship exists, the primary focus should be on the facts of the worker’s activity and remuneration, regardless of how the relationship is characterised in the contract. The EU’s so-called autonomous definition of a worker, as established by the CJEU, contains three main criteria to establish the existence of an employment relationship: whether the person performing the work acts under direction, the nature of the work (e.g. whether it is real, effective and regular) and whether remuneration is received for the work. Recent judgments of the CJEU lead to the conclusion that such a definition should be applied in all Member States in order to guarantee the effectiveness of employment law directives. This line of interpretation is further reinforced by the reference to the autonomous definition of worker in Directive 2019/1152 z on transparent and predictable working conditions in the European Union. The aim of the publication is to reflect on whether the application of this definition would mean that individual and collective labour law rights would also be extended to the ostensibly self-employed.
Journal: Acta Universitatis Lodziensis. Folia Iuridica
- Issue Year: 2022
- Issue No: 101
- Page Range: 21-34
- Page Count: 14
- Language: Polish