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By: Siobhan Owers, Iskra Nikolic Uskokovic
The UK Government introduced the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill in the House of Commons on 20 December. The EU Withdrawal bill will revoke retained EU law and, importantly, end free movement for EU citizens as well as protect the rights of Irish citizens. The Bill contains a power which enables the UK Government to amend the retained social security coordination regime and deliver policy changes post EU exit.
Key Points
All EU nationals (and their families) who are covered by the social security legislation of an EU country can benefit from the European Social Security Co-ordination Regulations. They apply to employees and self-employed, civil servants, students and pensioners, but also to unemployed, not yet working or no longer working. The EU Regulations also apply to non-EU nationals and their family members who reside legally in the EU. The Regulations lay down common rules to protect social security rights when moving within the EU / EEA (i.e. including Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland). However, it does not replace the national social security systems by one single European system.
As such, for the UK Government, it is important to maintain consistency between the future immigration system and the availability of benefit support for EEA nationals. This is the reason why the UK Government is bringing forward social security legislative provisions into the Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill, to enable the UK to respond to its withdrawal from the EU by making changes to its own social security arrangements, incorporating aspects of immigration.
The power will enable the UK Government to make suitable legislative provisions for a range of post-Brexit scenarios that may arise. In response to the outcome of negotiations with the EU, the power may need to be exercised to implement policy changes to the retained social security co-ordination rules. These rules cover a wide range of issues, developing a framework for future social security coordination policy:
- how EU nationals can access certain UK benefits and pensions in future;
- to what extent UK nationals can export certain benefits and pensions; and
- what rules will apply to people that work and live in more than one country.
- On 13 December 2018, the UK Government has published a Statutory Instrument and Explanatory Memorandum in respect of the EU Social Security Coordination rules. The instrument aims to maintain the current EU rules on a unilateral basis through UK domestic legislation. However, in order for the EU rules to continue to apply, the draft legislation should be accepted by the relevant EU/EEA countries. If not, this may result in additional social security contributions due in the EU/EEA countries, and additional reporting and compliance obligations for employers.
- In addition, the UK has reached an agreement with Switzerland, which protects the rights of UK and Swiss nationals who have chosen to call each other’s countries as their ‘Home country’.
The position of the UK Government in its negotiations with the EU, aiming at achieving fair principles, which will protect individual’s rights and treat all countries consistently, is still not final. The Immigration and Social Security Co-ordination (EU Withdrawal) Bill will allow the UK Government to revoke or amend the EU Social Security Co-ordination Rules as retained by the EU Withdrawal Act 2018 and provide powers to the UK Government to set out new rules on Social Security Co-ordination for EU nationals in the UK.
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