Categories: Insights


22 Jun 2015

JOBS ACT: THE REFORM OF ARTICLE 2103 OF THE CIVIL CODE AND TWO CASES OF IUS VARIANDI

The Legislative Decree on contracts passed by the Council of Ministers reforms article 2103 of the Civil Code including the possibility for employers to unilaterally change a worker’s job duties within the same level and contractual legal employment category. Thus it will no longer be necessary to perform an evaluation on the equivalence of the duties for the purpose of clarifying the legitimacy of ius variandi. In this sense the legal orientation has been superseded, which had become consolidated on the point, whereby to verify the employer’s legitimate exercising of ius variandi, it was necessary to verify the actual uniformity between duties later assigned to the worker and the original duties, in terms of their concrete equivalence compared to the skills requested, professional level reach and use of the professional background acquired by the employee. This without being significant that from a formal standpoint, both types of duties are part of the same operating area. Superseding of this orientation will certainly result in a significant reduction in the number of disputes concerning demotion, this is also based on the fact that this possibility of modification does not even require particular formalities. A change in duties which determines a lower level, with the same legal category, will be possible in two cases: a) when it is based on a “change in company structure that affects the worker’s job” and b) in cases included in collective contracts. The hypothesis in letter a) raises questions regarding interpretations which will presumably be resolved in light of the idea of objective justified reason connected in turn to “reasons connected with production activity, organisation or work and its regular functioning”. In the latter cases unilateral modification of duties requires complying with certain limits: it can take place only within the same category (manager, middle manager, white collar worker, blue collar worker) and must be notified in writing, or it is invalid. In addition, the worker shall have the right to maintain the current employment level and salary, with the exception of remuneration elements connected to particular procedures for performing the previous job. Lastly, in the interest of the worker to maintain his job, acquire a new profession or improve working conditions, the possibility has been included to stipulate various agreements changing the duties, legal category, employment level and related salary, in a trade union venue before a judge or certification commissions. This solution adopted in practice already in the past for private employment, definitively clarifies its legitimacy. The greater flexibility introduced by the revision of article 2103 of the Civil Code changes the legal orientations into law that were reached trying to provide answers for the current job market.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

13 Jul 2026

Cautious, yet moving forward (Business People, 13 luglio 2026 – Vittorio De Luca)

In Business People, our Managing Partner, Vittorio De Luca, discusses a business landscape that is cautious, yet far from standing still—one that is rethinking processes, skills, and management…

8 Jul 2026

Pay transparency: one month after its entry into force, two approaches are emerging in the market (The Platform, 8 July 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Claudia Cerbone e Martina De Angeli)

Since 7 June, EU rules aimed at strengthening the principle of equal pay between men and women for the same work or for work of equal value have…

2 Jul 2026

Did you know…? As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force

As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force. It also introduces into the Italian legal system a structured framework on pay transparency, with…

2 Jul 2026

Failure to serve disciplinary charges does not render the dismissal null and void: italian supreme court confirms no reinstatement remedy for employers below the statutory workforce threshold

Principle of Law In its recent judgment No. 17283 of 1 June 2026, the Italian Supreme Court (Corte di Cassazione) examined the legal consequences arising from the employer's…

2 Jul 2026

AI and the employment relationship: initial guidance from the implementing decrees and data protection implications

Following the preliminary approval by the Council of Ministers, on 10 June 2026, of the first draft legislative decrees implementing the enabling law on artificial intelligence (Law No.…

1 Jul 2026

Sustainability, Responsibility, and the Future: A Commitment That Grows with Time

As we celebrate our 50th anniversary, we have chosen to look to the future with the same care and dedication with which we preserve our roots. Those roots…