The
Court has upheld the directive’s most significant provisions, preserving the
architecture of what could become a transformative instrument for European
workers. These include the directive’s reference values for adequate national
statutory minimum wages—set at 60 per cent of the national median wage and 50
per cent of the national average wage. The Court also validated the directive’s
obligation on member states to promote collective bargaining, including its
ambitious target of achieving 80 per cent collective bargaining coverage.
Perhaps most significantly, it preserved crucial articles on trade union
rights, particularly those requiring employers to grant unions access to their
employees.
The
political irony at the heart of this verdict cannot be overstated. The EU Court
would hardly have endorsed this decommodifying directive on adequate minimum
wages had national and European employer associations not successfully lobbied
the European Union after the 2008 financial crisis to impose commodifying wage
cuts and collective bargaining reforms. These interventions came through the
country-specific policy prescriptions embedded in the EU’s new economic
governance regime.
By
pushing EU executives to intervene directly in national wage-setting mechanisms
during the crisis years, employer associations inadvertently transformed wage
policymaking and collective bargaining into legitimate areas of EU competence.
As we documented in “Politicising Commodification: European Governance and Labour
Politics from the Financial Crisis to the Covid Emergency”, this strategic
choice by employers created an unexpected precedent that would later enable
progressive EU legislation.
The
Court of Justice could no longer credibly argue that the EU lacks powers in
decommodifying wage policy and collective bargaining after having previously
endorsed the EU’s commodifying country-specific interventions. These earlier rulings had validated wage cuts and collective
bargaining decentralisation imposed after 2008. The workers of Europe would
simply not have understood why the EU possessed the power to cut wages and
decentralise collective bargaining during the crisis, yet lacked the authority
to establish a framework for adequate minimum wages and higher collective
bargaining coverage rates.
To
address concerns from the Danish government about potential EU overreach in pay
policy, the Court made selective deletions to provisions it deemed overly
prescriptive. Most notably, it removed the final sentence of Article 5.3,
thereby allowing member states with automatic wage-indexing rules to lower
statutory minimum wage levels. This concession certainly serves the interests
of Danish and Swedish employer associations, who pressed their governments hard
to mount this legal challenge against the directive.
What
remains more puzzling is the support of many Danish and Swedish progressives
for a legal challenge that is facilitating of lower minimum wages elsewhere in
the EU, as if this would strengthen the Nordic social model. This view appears
to reflect a misunderstanding of how wage competition operates within the
single market and how higher wage floors across Europe could actually protect
Nordic standards rather than undermine them.
This
verdict demonstrates how the expansion of EU competences often occurs through
unintended consequences of political manoeuvring. Employer associations, in
their eagerness to use EU institutions to impose wage restraint during the
crisis, inadvertently opened the door for EU-level social legislation that they
now find themselves unable to close. The Court’s ruling confirms that once
policy areas become Europeanised—even for neoliberal purposes—they remain
available for progressive intervention when political winds shift.
The
decision represents a significant victory for advocates of Social Europe, even
with the minor concessions made to appease Nordic concerns. It establishes that
the EU can set meaningful standards for wage adequacy and collective bargaining
coverage, creating a foundation for upward convergence in labour standards
across the Union. The employers’ tactical victory during the financial crisis
has thus become their strategic defeat in the longer struggle over European
social policy.
This post was first published on Social Europe on 13 November 2025.
Roland
Erne
is professor of European integration and employment relations, and principal
investigator of the European Research Council project ‘Labour Politics
& the EU's New Economic Governance Regime‘, in the School of Business
and the Geary Institute for Public Policy, University College Dublin.


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