The Case in Brief
Greek legislation for family benefits3 sets out specific requirements for residence in Greece before family benefits can be granted to EU mobile workers and non-EU mobile workers who are covered by EU legislation for social security.4
The legislation distinguished between two categories of mobile workers:
- EU nationals who have been residing for at least five years together with their children in Greece are eligible to apply for family benefits:
- Non-EU nationals who are covered by the EU social security coordination rules, because they moved to Greece from another EU member state, can only apply for family benefits after being resident in Greece for at least 12 years.
EU coordination rules for social security stress that the “general principal of equal treatment is of particular importance for workers who do not reside in the EU member state of employment.”5
Furthermore, the EU coordination rules are outlined in a way that mobile workers and their families are guaranteed that, when moving within the EU, their rights are retained, “in particular by aggregating all the periods taken into account under the various national legislation for the purpose of acquiring and retaining the right to benefits.”6
The European Commission hints that Greek law violates the equality of treatment principle enshrined in EU rules for social security7 and that the conditions of residence outlined in the country’s law infringe Article 7 on EU coordination rules for social security. Article 7 stipulates that benefits “shall not be subject to any reduction, amendment, suspension, withdrawal or confiscation on account of the fact that the beneficiary or the members of his/her family reside in a Member State other than that in which the institution responsible for providing benefits is situated.”8