Keywords
Summary

Keywords

Freedom of movement for persons — Workers — Equal treatment — Social advantages — National rules making the grant of financial aid for higher education subject to a condition of residence on national territory — Refusal to grant aid to students, who are Union citizens not residing in national territory, one of whose parents is a frontier worker — Indirect discrimination — Justification — Increase in the proportion of residents with a higher education degree — Disproportionate nature of those rules

(Council Regulation No 1612/68, as amended by Directive 2004/38, Art. 7(2))

Summary

Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community, as amended by Directive 2004/38, must be interpreted as precluding, in principle, legislation of a Member State which makes the grant of financial aid for higher education studies conditional upon residence by the student in that Member State and gives rise to a difference in treatment, amounting to indirect discrimination, between persons who reside in the Member State concerned and those who, not being residents of that Member State, are the children of frontier workers carrying out an activity in that Member State.

While the objective of increasing the proportion of residents with a higher education degree in order to promote the development of the economy of that same Member State is a legitimate objective which can justify such a difference in treatment and while a condition of residence, such as that provided for by the national legislation at issue in the main proceedings, is appropriate for ensuring the attainment of that objective, such a condition nevertheless goes beyond what is necessary in order to attain the objective pursued, to the extent that it precludes the taking into account of other elements potentially representative of the actual degree of attachment of the applicant for the financial aid with the society or with the labour market of the Member State concerned, such as the fact that one of the parents, who continues to support the student, is a frontier worker who has stable employment in that Member State and has already worked there for a significant period of time.

(see para. 83, operative part)


Case C-20/12

Elodie Giersch and Others

v

État du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg

(Request for a preliminary ruling from the Tribunal administratif (Luxembourg))

‛Freedom of movement for persons — Equal treatment — Social advantages — Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 — Article 7(2) — Financial aid for higher education studies — Condition of residence in the Member State granting the assistance — Refusal to grant the aid to students, who are European Union citizens not residing in the Member State concerned, whose father or mother, a frontier worker, works in that Member State — Indirect discrimination — Justification — Objective of increasing the proportion of residents with a higher education degree — Whether appropriate — Proportionality’

Summary — Judgment of the Court (Fifth Chamber), 20 June 2013

Freedom of movement for persons — Workers — Equal treatment — Social advantages — National rules making the grant of financial aid for higher education subject to a condition of residence on national territory — Refusal to grant aid to students, who are Union citizens not residing in national territory, one of whose parents is a frontier worker — Indirect discrimination — Justification — Increase in the proportion of residents with a higher education degree — Disproportionate nature of those rules

(Council Regulation No 1612/68, as amended by Directive 2004/38, Art. 7(2))

Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1612/68 on freedom of movement for workers within the Community, as amended by Directive 2004/38, must be interpreted as precluding, in principle, legislation of a Member State which makes the grant of financial aid for higher education studies conditional upon residence by the student in that Member State and gives rise to a difference in treatment, amounting to indirect discrimination, between persons who reside in the Member State concerned and those who, not being residents of that Member State, are the children of frontier workers carrying out an activity in that Member State.

While the objective of increasing the proportion of residents with a higher education degree in order to promote the development of the economy of that same Member State is a legitimate objective which can justify such a difference in treatment and while a condition of residence, such as that provided for by the national legislation at issue in the main proceedings, is appropriate for ensuring the attainment of that objective, such a condition nevertheless goes beyond what is necessary in order to attain the objective pursued, to the extent that it precludes the taking into account of other elements potentially representative of the actual degree of attachment of the applicant for the financial aid with the society or with the labour market of the Member State concerned, such as the fact that one of the parents, who continues to support the student, is a frontier worker who has stable employment in that Member State and has already worked there for a significant period of time.

(see para. 83, operative part)