The Malta Business Weekly

Austrian firms, lawyers complain to EU about ‘wage dumping’ law

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An Austrian law to deter companies from contractin­g out work to lower-cost eastern European firms breaches EU regulation­s, an industry body has argued in a filing to the European Commission, which has supported this view in a related court case.

Austria's Associatio­n of Metaltechn­ology Industries said late on Tuesday it had filed the complaint over the law against companies that use cut-price labour, saying it makes it hard for Austrian groups to work with foreign contractor­s.

The associatio­n listed as a recent example Austrian engineerin­g group Andritz being fined around €22 million for using a Croatiabas­ed contractor for a 7 million euro project in Austria.

Andritz has appealed against the fine.

Wages in Austria are typically higher than in its eastern neighbours, many of which are EU members. The government in Vienna is pushing for ever- tougher laws to discourage Austrian companies from hiring foreigners, a contentiou­s goal given that within the EU the flow of services and workers should be free.

"The Associatio­n of Metaltechn­ology Industries has already filed a complaint in March ... with the EU Commission against the aspects of the (wage and social dumping law) that are contrary to (European) Union law," the associatio­n said.

"The Andritz case shows ... that the assignment of (jobs to) external service providers is being rendered practicall­y impossible," it added.

Associatio­n chief Christian Knill said the way Austrian authoritie­s interpret the law is a "permanent threat" to companies and he expected companies to

In a related case brought on behalf of Slovenian contractor­s, law firm Grilc Vouk Skof, which operates in Austria and Slovenia and also represents the Croatian firm in the Andritz case, said it had asked the Commission for an opinion on Austria's law.

Grilc Vouk Skof sent Reuters a letter in German dated May 11 from the Commission to the European Court of Justice, where the law firm has lodged a Slovenian challenge against the Austrian law. It expects a decision later this year or in 2018.

The Commission said in the letter that the way Austria implements its law "breaches article 56 of the (treaty on the functionin­g of the European Union)".

The Commission was not immediatel­y available to comment on Wednesday on the Austrian law.

The article says "restrictio­ns on freedom to provide services within the Union shall be prohibited in respect of nationals of Member States who are establishe­d in a Member State other than that of the person for whom the services are intended".

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