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Casenote –– Human Dignity as a Matter of Legislative Consistency in an Ideal World: The Fundamental Right to Guarantee a Subsistence Minimum in the German Federal Constitutional Court's Judgment of 9 February 2010
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Extract
“Human dignity shall be inviolable. To respect and protect shall be the duty of all state authority.” It is with this proclamation in Article 1(1) Basic Law (“Grundgesetz” or “GG”) that the German Constitution starts its section on fundamental rights. When the Parliamentary Council formulated this basic right, they had in mind the denial of fundamental rights during the period of National Socialism and the atrocities of the Holocaust. The framers, however, did not envisage a constitutional right to state benefits despite Article 151(1) of the Weimar Imperial Constitution of 1919 linking the ordering of economic life with the purpose of ensuring a dignified existence for all. Utilizing a constitutional originalism approach the German Federal Constitutional Court (“FCC”) never could have arrived at what is referred to as the Hartz IV decision. This decision creates a constitutional right to guarantee by law a subsistence minimum based on Article 1(1) GG in conjunction with the social state principle in Article 20(1) GG. The decision can be read as—possibly the first—conceptualisation of a constitutional socio-economic right to statutory state benefits by a Constitutional Court.
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- Research Article
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- German Law Journal , Volume 12 , Issue 11: Special section - The Hartz IV Case and the German Sozialstaat , 01 November 2011 , pp. 1941 - 1960
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- Copyright © 2011 by German Law Journal GbR
References
1 For a very thorough presentation of the FCC's adjudication on human dignity in the English language see Henk Botha, Human Dignity in Comparative Perspective, 2 STELL. L. Rev. 171, 178–96 (2009).Google Scholar
2 Id. at 179. Article 151(1) of the Weimar Imperial Constitution (WRV) states that the ordering of economic life should conform to the principles of justice, with the goal of achieving a dignified existence for all. Within these limits economic freedom of the individual has to be secured.Google Scholar
3 Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], 1 BvL 1/09, 1 BvL 3/09, 1 BvL 4/09 of 9 Feb. 2010 (Hartz IV). Citations refer to the official collection of the FCC's decisions at senate level Entscheidungen des Bundesverfassungsgerichts [BVerfGE 125, 175] and to the English translation available at http://www.bverfg.de/entscheidungen/ls20100209_1bvl000109en.html (last visited 16 Nov. 2011), cited as bverfg.de.Google Scholar
4 Article 20(1) GG (social state principle) reads: “The Federal Republic of Germany is a democratic and social federal state.”Google Scholar
5 It appears that a comparison with the Supreme Court of India's adjudication on the protection of life and personal liberty (Article 21 of the Constitution of India) read in conjunction with the directive principle of policy that the State shall direct its policy towards securing that the citizens, men and women equally, have the right to an adequate means of livelihood (Article 39(a) of the Constitution of India) could be very interesting. For a brief overview on the Supreme Court of India's adjudication in this field see M.B. Shah, The Indian Supreme Court Acknowledges the Right to Food as a Human Right, Entwicklung und ländlicher Raum 24–26 (2006), available at http://archiv.rural-development.de/fileadmin/rural-development/volltexte/2006/01/ELR_dt_24-26.pdf (last visited 9 Nov. 2011).Google Scholar
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7 See Aubel, Tobias, Das Gewährleistungsrecht auf ein menschenwürdiges Existenzminimum, in Linien der Rechtsprechung des Bundesverfassungsgerichts erörtert von den wissenschaftlichen Mitarbeitern, Vol. 2, 173, 273, 275 (Sigrid Emmenegger & Ariane Wiedemann eds., 2011).Google Scholar
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12 See BVerfGK 14, 99, 2 BvR 840/06 of 24 July 2008 (Ger.).Google Scholar
13 This point was already well established in the adjudication of the Federal Administrative Court (Bundesverwaltungsgericht). See BVerwGE 1, 159 (161), V C 78.54 of 24 June 1954 (Ger.).Google Scholar
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15 This insurance scheme is now found in the Seventh Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB VII).Google Scholar
16 BVerfGE 75, 348 (360), 1 BvR 762/85 of 20 May 1987 (Ger.).Google Scholar
17 See Egidy, supra note 14, at 1961. The reforms were named after their architect, Peter Hartz, a member of the Board at Volkswagen in charge of personnel and the advisor to chancellor Schröder at the time.Google Scholar
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19 The shortening and lengthening of this period of time—currently 6 to 24 months according to § 127 of the Third Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB III)—has been a preferred field of action to make statements of social policy according to the outcome of the latest election.Google Scholar
20 See Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) § 12.Google Scholar
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23 See Sixth Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB VI) §170(1) (valid from 1 Jan. 2005 to 31 Dec. 2010).Google Scholar
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26 Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) § 11.Google Scholar
27 Lawsuits in the social courts are free of cost for the claimants (Sozialgerichtsbarkeit [SGG] [Statute on Social Jurisdiction] § 183), regardless of the outcome of the lawsuit.Google Scholar
28 A lot of claims in the social courts do not deal with the level of benefits, but with a bundle of other questions such as: what effort a person has to make in order to get back into work; whether the flat in which he or she is living is appropriate and has to be, therefore, fully paid for; how different kinds of income are to be counted against the need as expressed in the standard benefit; what kind of associated living counts as a “joint household” with the consequence of an aggregation of incomes and needs of the persons living together, etc.Google Scholar
29 An exception is the additional benefit that those previously entitled to unemployment benefit received for a limited period of time under Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) § 24, effective until 31 Dec. 2010, which cushioned the shift from unemployment benefit to Hartz IV. See supra Section C.I.Google Scholar
30 According to Article 100(1) GG. The Higher Social Court of Hesse, proceedings 1 BvL 1/09, addressed specifically the children's benefits. See Hessisches Landessozialgericht [Higher Social Court of Hesse] L 6 AS 336/07 of 29 Oct. 2008 (Ger.).Google Scholar
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35 On this aspect, see Timo Hebeler, Ist der Gesetzgeber verpflichtet, Gesetze zu begründen?, 18 Die öffentliche Verwaltung (DÖV) 754 (2010). The procedural approach was not entirely new but well established in the adjudication of the Federal Administrative Court. See Egidy, supra note 14, at 1975; Rothkegel, Ralf, Ein Danaergeschenk für den Gesetzgeber, 2010 Zeitschrift für die sozialrechtliche Praxis (ZFSH/SGB) 135, 141.Google Scholar
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37 The empirical evaluation and interpretation undertaken by the Ministry in preparation for the amending legislation rendered the result that the children's entitlements prior to January 2011 had actually been too high. They were, however, not reduced in the amending legislation. See Law on the Ascertainment of Standard Needs and on the Amendment of the Second Book and Twelfth Book of the Code of Social Law § 8, supra note 24.Google Scholar
38 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (232-238), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010; bverfg. de at para. 159–172 (Ger.).Google Scholar
39 Id. BVerfGE 125, 175 (238); bverfg. de at para. 171.Google Scholar
40 Id. BVerfGE 125, 175 (238, 239); bverfg. de at para. 175.Google Scholar
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43 Id. BVerfGE 125, 175 (259, 260); bverfg.de at para. 220.Google Scholar
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45 Hebeler claims that the FCC had already derived an entitlement from Article 1(1) in conjunction with Article 20(1) GG. See Hebeler, supra note 36, at 756. However, the cited decision on child benefits did not formulate a claim against the state but stated that the reduction of child benefits for tax paying parents did not affect the state's duty derived from the social state principle to create the minimum conditions for an existence in human dignity. See BVerfGE 82, 60 (85), 1 BvL 20/84, 1 BvL 26/84, 1 BvL 4/86 of 29 May 1990 (Ger.). Egidy points out that none of the decisions that the FCC cites in support of the fundamental right to the guarantee of a subsistence minimum deals with an entitlement of the individual to social benefits that might be derived directly from the Constitution. See Egidy, supra note 14, at 1971. Berlit sees a consolidation of the prior adjudication but no quantum leap. See Uwe Berlit, Paukenschlag mit Kompromisscharakter – zum SGB II-Regelleistungsurteil des Bundesverfassungsgerichts vom 9 Februar 2010, 2 Kritische Justiz (KJ) 145, 147 (2010).Google Scholar
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47 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (225, 259), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010; bverfg.de at para. 140, 220 (Ger.).Google Scholar
48 See Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) § 21(6).Google Scholar
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50 See Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) §§ 28, 29 (valid from 1 April 2011).Google Scholar
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52 See Aubel, supra note 7, at 283.Google Scholar
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54 Id. BVerfGE 125, 175 (223); bverfg.de at para. 135. For a comparable phrasing of a right to live with human dignity, note a decision by the Supreme Court of India addressing the right of a detainee to have contact with her children, but not the right to entitlement of social benefits. The Court found that:Google Scholar
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57 See Aubel, supra note 7, at 280.Google Scholar
58 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (223), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010; bverfg.de at para. 135 (Ger.). Egidy acknowledges this essential argument in the Court's decision, but advocates such a splitting up of the right to the guarantee of a subsistence minimum in its two parts. See Egidy, supra note 14, at 1966, 1972.Google Scholar
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70 For such a legislative approach in the United States, see the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act. See Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-193, 110 Stat. 2105.Google Scholar
71 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (225), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010, para. 140 (Ger.).Google Scholar
72 Id. BVerfGE 125, 175 (225); bverfg.de at para. 204.Google Scholar
73 The legislature transplanted the Court's formula into a statutory provision, see Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) §21(6), valid form 1 April 2011, thus leaving to the social courts the task of defining what such a need could actually be.Google Scholar
74 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (252), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010; bverfg.de at para. 204 and Ruling No. 3 (Ger.).Google Scholar
75 Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II) § 23, valid until 31 December 2010.Google Scholar
76 See Hartz IV, BVerfGE 125, 175 (254), 1 BvL 1/09 et al. of 9 Feb. 2010; bverfg.de at para. 207 (Ger.). Another example could be recurring costs for irrefutably necessary health care items needed in special situations and not covered by the mandatory health insurance paid for by the state.Google Scholar
77 This limitation was again stressed in the order of 24 Mar. 2010. See 1 BvR 395/09 of 24 Mar. 2010, para. 6 (Ger.), available at http://www.bundesverfassungsgericht.de/entscheidungen/rk20100324_1bvr039509.html. The limitation was, however, overlooked by the Federal Social Court in its judgment of 18 Feb. 2010. See Bundessozialgericht [BSG] [Federal Social Court], 18 Feb. 2010, Entscheidungen des Bundessozialgerichts [BSGE], B 4 AS 29/09 R of 18 Feb. 2010, BSGE 105, 279 (291) (Ger.). The FCC's formulation of the hardship clause was adopted by the legislature in § 21(6) of the amended Second Book of the German Code of Social Law (SGB II). A claim to additional benefits is defined as irrefutable if the need cannot be covered by benefits of third parties or using cost-saving methods and if the special need differs substantially from the average need.Google Scholar
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97 Id. at 145.Google Scholar
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