Eurofound's ERM database on restructuring-related legal regulations provides
information on regulations in the Member States of the European Union and Norway
which are explicitly or implicitly linked to anticipating and managing change.
Belgium: Effects of non-compliance with dismissal regulations
Phase
Law of 13 February 1998 regarding measures in favour of employment (so-called 'Renault Law'); Collective Agreement n°109 of 12 February 2014 on justified dismissal
Native name
Loi du 13 février 1998 portant des dispositions en faveur de l'emploi dite loi Renault /Wet van 13 februari 1998 houdende bepalingen tot bevordering van de tewerkstelling (Wet Renault); Convention collective de travail no. 109 du 12 février 2014 concernant la motivation du licenciement/Collectieve arbeitsovereenkomst nr. 109 van 12 februari 2014 betreffende de motivering van het ontslag
Type
Effects of non-compliance with dismissal regulations
Added to database
08 May 2015
Article
Act of 13 February 1998: articles 62-70;
Collective Agreement nr. 109 of 12 February 2014: article 7.
Description
The national legislation makes it possible to take action against employers who fail to comply with the information and consultation requirements of the employee representatives (works council in the first place) specified in collective dismissal regulations.
In case of collective redundancy (corresponding to cases where, within 60 days, there are at least 10 dismissals in companies with 20-99 employees, at least 10% in companies with 100-299 employees, and at least 30 dismissals in companies with 300 or more employees), if workers and/or unions' representatives consider that the employer fails to comply with such requirements (such as information and consultation procedures), objections can be launched to the regional employment office during the procedure or during the 30 days waiting period. During this period, the employer cannot proceed to any layoff. If no objections are expressed during this period, the law assumes that the employer has respected the necessary requirements and the employer is allowed to proceed with the collective dismissal at the end of it. However, if objections regarding the information and consultation procedure are expressed, the regional employment office may extend the waiting period up to 60 days in order to allow time to find a solution. If objections are more related to non-compliance with the collective dismissal regulations, they may be expressed to the labour court, extension may apply here as well.
The main sanction that can be used involves halting the dismissal of workers or even reinstatement, although this happens very rarely, as in practice unions and employers most of the time quickly go to the next step of bargaining a 'social plan' to obtain (extra) severance payments. However, as soon as a complaint is made during the adequate period, the notice period is adjourned.
Collective Agreement nr. 109 formalises the right of an employee formalises the right of an employee to know the reasons that have led to his or her dismissal, and the right to a restitution in case of an apparent unreasonable dismissal. Failure of the employer to to fulfil the request of an employee to know the reasons of their dismissal is sanctioned with a fine equivalent to two weeks of pay of the employee involved (Art. 7). If a dismissal of an employee is deemed unreasonable, it is sanctioned with a fine equivalent to three to seventeen weeks of pay, depending on the degree of unreasonableness (Art. 9).
Public employment service
Trade union
Works council
Court
Involvement (others)
None
Thresholds
Affected employees: No, applicable in all circumstances Company size: No, applicable in all circumstances Additional information: No, applicable in all circumstances
This Eurofound research paper explores key trends in restructuring in recent years, highlighting the companies that announced the largest job losses and job gains in the EU. It builds on an analysis of company announcements recorded in Eurofound’s European Restructuring Monitor (ERM), alongside a new classification of restructuring events involving changes in company location.
Employers increasingly use tools such as email, SMS and messaging apps like WhatsApp or Signal to communicate with employees. While these technologies offer both efficiency and convenience, their use in communicating sensitive information, particularly for notifying employees of dismissal, raises legal concerns. This article explores the legal framework on dismissals across the EU, with a special focus on the use of digital means for communicating employment dismissals. Drawing on examples from various Member States, it examines the legal validity of digital dismissals.
In 2023, thousands of workers in big tech lost their jobs. Meta, Amazon, Google, Apple, Microsoft and Salesforce had been considered to offer good and secure jobs up to this point. Giants of the information and communication technology (ICT) sector, these companies are among the highest paying, with Eurostat data from 2022 indicating that workers in ICT had the second-highest median gross hourly earnings (surpassed only by earnings in the financial sector).[1] These layoffs were a shock, especially as the biggest companies had hired extensively during the COVID-19 pandemic. What happened in the two years after this redundancy wave – was that the end of the cuts or did the companies start expanding again?
In 2024, the automotive sector in the EU came to the fore in public and policy discussions. The focus was on the slowdown in electric vehicle (EV) sales, rising global competition, belated investments in new technologies, and the potential closure of production lines in Europe. A number of European car manufacturers and suppliers announced their intention to make large-scale redundancies and change long-standing collective agreements on job security and wages, while workers raised concerns amid demonstrations and industrial action.