Since the ECJ handed down the Mangold v. Rüdiger Helm (Mangold) decision in 2005, scholars have provided sometimes quite far reaching and sharp critiques of the decision and of what they took to be its consequences for European Union law. The decision concerned several questions, but the core issue was the applicability of (then) Community (now European Union) age-based anti-discrimination law in the case of a fixed-term employment contract. The contract at issue was based on a law that allowed fixed-term contracts without demanding objective reasons justifying the limitation of the period of employment beyond the age of 52. The law is enmeshed in the political problem of including people older than 52 in the workforce without depriving them of secure working conditions. The legal issue was complicated by the fact that the transposition time of the relevant directive 2000/78/EC including the prohibition of discrimination on the ground of age had not yet expired because of a permissible extension of that time by Germany. The ECJ declared the relevant norm to be contrary to Community law and thus not applicable in the case at hand. It applied the directive in question despite the still pending time limit for transposition, arguing with the requirement under Community law that Member States refrain from taking any measures liable to seriously compromise the attainment of the result prescribed by the directive. It buttressed its argument with the duty to report about the progress made during the extended transposition time. This provision was held to imply that the Member State was not allowed to adopt measures incompatible with progressive implementation. Furthermore, the ECJ interpreted the prohibition of age discrimination as an expression of a fundamental principle of Community law: the principle of equal treatment in the field of employment and occupation. Applying a proportionality test, the court found this foundational principle to have been violated. The ECJ also underlined the broad discretion the Member States retained in the field of social and employment policies. Because the provision's only criterion for allowing fixed-term contracts without an objective reason was age, without any other consideration linked to the structure of the labor market in question or of the personal situation of the person concerned, the Court found that even in light of this broad discretion, the respective norm was not appropriate and necessary to vocationally integrating unemployed older workers, which formed the purpose of the norm.