Article contents
The (Possible) Role of the Right to Social Security in the EU Economic Monitoring Process
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Abstract
The outbreak of the financial and economic crisis in 2008 had a severe impact on the member states of the European Union. Countries like Greece had to ask the Troika (the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund) for financial aid. In return, they were obliged to reduce public spending and, as a result, national social security systems were drastically reformed. Furthermore, the EU has exercised its competences to supervise national budgets more extensively, even for countries not applying for financial aid through the Country Specific Recommendations under the European Semester. Like the decisions providing financial support, these recommendations also touch upon member states' social security systems. Moreover, the actions of the EU seem to generate a tension between the social rights provisions in (inter)national human rights instruments and the EU economic monitoring process, hence creating a possible deficit at the level of the EU. The five collective complaints against Greece under the framework of the European Social Charter (Council of Europe) illustrate this tension. This Article investigates this tension further and provides insights in possible ways to close the gap between (inter)national social rights provisions and the EU economic monitoring process by looking at the right to social security in the EU legal order. In doing so, this Article scrutinizes the judicial safeguards available at EU level, namely the right to social security in the Charter of Fundamental Rights (CFEU) and the role of general principles of Union's law for the protection of fundamental rights. It will become clear that a lot of uncertainty still remains regarding the content and scope of the right to social security in the CFEU, as well as the enforceability of this provision in the EU economic monitoring process.
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References
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[F]irstly it is apparent from the case-law that admissibility of an action for annulment before the European Union courts does not depend on whether there is a remedy before a national court enabling the validity of the act being challenged to be examined. A fortiori the admissibility of an action before the European Union courts cannot depend on the alleged slowness of national proceedings. In that regard, it must also be borne in mind that the second subparagraph of Article 19 (1) TEU provides that Member states are to provide remedies sufficient to ensure effective legal protection in the fields covered by EU law.“Google Scholar
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