The modified requirements for the notification of the remuneration components in the Nachweisgesetz
The new version of the Act on Notification of Employment Conditions (Nachweisgesetz, “NachwG 2022”) came into force on 1 August 2022. In practice, the implementation has so far primarily focused on the first under the NachwG 2022 regulated obligations to provide evidence (including the instruction to work overtime, the probationary period, work on call and the procedure in the event of termination of the employment relationship). In addition, the NachwG 2022 contains expanded requirements regarding the obligation to provide evidence of the remuneration components granted in an employment relationship (including the operational pension scheme). In this Client Alert, we discuss the relevant practical implications.
With the NachweisG 2022, the legislator implements the corresponding re-quirements of Directive (EU) 2019/1152 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 20 June 2019 on transparent and predictable working conditions in the European Union (“EU-Notification-Directive-II”). The EU-Notification-Directive II had replaced the original EU-Notification-Directive (91/533/EEC), which had served as the basis for the earlier version of the Act on Notification of Employment Conditions (“NachwG I”). The German legislator published a draft of the NachwG 2022 on 2 May 2022 (please refer to Deloitte Legal Client Alert) and enacted the NachwG 2022 on 20 July 2022.
The Act on Notification of Employment Conditions in its previous version (Sec. 2 para. 1 s. 2 no. 6 NachwG I) already stipulated the obligation to provide evidence for the remuneration components granted in the employment relationship, specifically on the composition and amount of the remuneration including supplements, bonuses, premiums, and special payments as well as other components of the remuneration and their due date. This was done, in light of the law’s purpose, to provide the parties to the employment contract, and especially the employee, with legal certainty and clarity regarding the relevant remuneration components. In accordance with Sec. 2 para. 3 of the NachwG I, the employer may only deviate from this requirement for remuneration components granted pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement or an operational/service agreement by citing the applicable collective-law regulation.
In practice, the requirements of the NachwG I were not always implemented as intended by the legislator, as the employer wanted to maintain the flexibility it desired, particularly in the case of voluntarily granted benefits, at the expense of proving the content-related parameters of the specific remuneration component. The employer faced no material legal consequences for failing to comply with the statutory duty to provide evidence: Aside from his claim for evidence of the working conditions, according to the case law of the Federal Labour Court (Bundesarbeitsgericht, BAG), the employee could only assert a claim for damages against the employer if he was unable to assert the remuneration component, which was unwritten and subject to a (minimum three-month) cut-off period, within the cut-off period due to lack of knowledge. In practice, however, the employee was often unable to conclusively demonstrate the necessary causality between the violation of the duty to provide evidence and the damage - which lay in the monetary equivalent of the remuneration component - so that corresponding lawsuits were risky for employees and were rarely filed. In practice, therefore, the obligations to provide evidence under NachwG I were frequently viewed as a ‘toothless tiger’.
The legislator recognised this and, in accordance with Article 19 of the EU-Notification-Directive-II, declared the violation of the obligation to provide evidence as an administrative offence in Sec. 4 of the NachwG 2022, which states that a violation of the obligation to provide evidence of the (individual) remuneration components, among other things, can result in a fine of up to EUR 2,000. Only intentional violations are subject to a fine (Sec. 10 Administrative Offences Act, Ordnungswidrigkeitengesetz, “OWiG”). A negligent violation of the obligation to provide evidence (even in the event of a subjectively culpable error on the part of the employer regarding the content/scope of the individual remuneration packages to be provided) is irrelevant for the imposition of a fine. In cases of doubt, employers should therefore document the considerations made for the denial of the obligation to provide evidence for the specific remuneration parameter (paper trail) to avoid allegations of an intentional violation of the obligation to provide evidence.
In addition to the formal obligations to provide evidence, the content-related structuring of the individual remuneration components granted by virtue of the employment contract, or the overall commitment is already subject to the requirements of terms and conditions control under Secs. 305 et seq. of the German Civil Code (Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, or “BGB”), taking into account the case law on (general) terms and conditions established by the Federal Labour Court. Particularly, the transparency requirement of Sec. 307 para. 1 s. 2 BGB requires employers to regulate and document the conditions of the individual remuneration component in a manner that is understandable to the employee, especially if flexibility is intended (e.g., by means of a revocation clause or by means of a discretionary determination of the reason and/or amount). In addition, special legal provisions applicable to individual employers determine additional documentation requirements, such as Sec. 13 of the InstitutsVergV for credit institutions and financial services institutions with respect to the content-related parameters of the individual (variable) remuneration components. These requirements exist concurrently with the formal requirements of NachwG 2022.
In the NachwG 2022, the legislator updated the catalogue of remuneration parameters that must be documented and added the parameters of the category of payment and the separate disclosure of the individual remuneration components. For the individual parameters, this results in information that must be verified, e.g.
Only actually agreed-upon supplements, bonuses, premiums, special payments and/or other remuneration components are to be stated. The obligation to provide evidence does not include a negative statement by the employer.
In Sec. 2 para. 4 s. 1 NachwG 2022, the legislator has also continued the employer's option to provide evidence for remuneration components granted on the basis of a collective bargaining agreement or an operation-al/service agreement by referring to the relevant collective-law regulation. The Federal Labour Court had already ruled on the identical provision of Sec. 2 para. 3 NachwG I that in the case of remuneration components under collective bargaining agreements the employer already fulfils the obligation to provide evidence by referring to the relevant collective bargaining agreement and therefore does not have to provide a concrete explanation (/subsumption) of the relevant substantive parameters for the concrete remuneration component in the documentation (BAG ruling of 8 June 2005, 4 AZR 406/04: In this case, the employer is not required to refer to the relevant classification features with regard to the classification of the employee under the collective agreement for the fixed remuneration - the statement of the relevant collective agreement group is sufficient).
The essential contractual conditions (including the remuneration components granted in the employment relationship) must be set down in writing by the employer within the specified time limits pursuant to Sec. 2 para. 1 s. 1 and s. 4 NachwG 2022, and the signature must be provided and handed over to the employee. The NachwG 2022 retains the reference that evidence of the essential terms and conditions of the contract in electronic form is excluded. The need-based way of fulfilling the obligation to provide evidence by concluding the employment contract containing the essential contractual conditions is thus not possible if the employer has the employment contract electronically signed. In this case, the employer must also summarise the terms and conditions in writing and send it to the employee within the specified time limits. It remains to be seen whether a more appropriate way of documentation can be found in practice - also taking into consideration the formal legal requirements.
The extended obligations to provide evidence refer to occupational pension commitments which the employer implements in an external way (direct insurance, pension plan, pension fund, support fund) and for which he has to prove the name and address of this pension provider to the employee (Sec. 2 para. 1 s. 2 no. 13 NachwG 2022). The abolition of the obligation to provide evidence in the case of an independent obligation to provide information on the part of the external pension provider, which is also stipulated in Sec. 2 para. 1 s. 2 no. 13 NachwG 2022, covers the pension plan (for which there is an independent obligation to provide information on the part of the external pension provider according to Sec. 234m of the German Insurance Supervision Act (Gesetz über die Beaufsichtigung der Versicherungsunternehmen, “VAG”)), pension fund (Sec. 237 para. 1 s. 1, 234m VAG) and direct insurance (Sec. 144 para. 1, 234m VAG). As a result, only occupational pension commitments in the implementation channel of the support fund are covered by the extended obligation to provide evidence.
For these, the employer fulfils the obligation to provide evidence unchanged by a general statement of the performance parameters and their determination.
If the performance parameters are determined by an agreement on objectives or unilateral setting of objectives by the employer, a general reference to this is sufficient; the obligation to provide evidence does not include the individual agreement on objectives or setting of objectives for the specific reference period.
In the case of a discretionary determination, the employer fulfils his obligation to provide evidence by pointing this out; at the same time, for material labour law reasons, he will announce the discretionary parameters to the employee in the individual case; this procedure also follows from Sec. 13 InstitutsVergV. If the discretionary right includes the determination of the amount of the variable remuneration component, this must be included in the evidence - the employer is not required to provide additional information on the amount of the remuneration.
Employers must assess the documentation for evidence of the remuneration components granted in the employment relationship for compliance with the NachwG 2022 and make any necessary readjustments. Individually, it may make sense, if not be required, to use the readjustment of the evidence requirements directly for content-related adjustments of the individual remuneration component, thereby making the remuneration system “future-proof”.
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