Categories: Insights, Publications · News, Publications

Tag: Jobs Act, Licenziamento


1 Apr 2021

A tale of increasing protection: discretion’s return (Norme & Tributi Plus Diritto – Il Sole 24 Ore, 1 April 2021 – Alberto De Luca, Valentino Biasi)

Six years ago, on 7 March 2015, the Jobs Act came into force, providing innovative protection if there is an unlawful dismissal for new employees under permanent contracts. At the time, this measure was considered revolutionary for the principles governing the existing protections. It intended to regulate the consequences of unlawful dismissal automatically and based on a mathematical formula. It was an ambitious project of overcoming the uncertainties of a system that had hinged on the judge’s discretion.

Based on the new rules, the scope of the debated right to reinstatement was redefined for companies with more than 15 employees. This was relegated to a residual hypothesis applicable only to the most severe cases (lack of evidence against the employee, or discriminatory dismissal or otherwise radically null and void). It gave way to compensation protection, from a minimum of four to a maximum of 24 monthly salary, which was rather low for the applicable criteria, especially in the first years of service.

At least in its intentions, the reform should have encouraged new employment and reduced the regulatory obstacles to attracting Italy’s investment.

A few years later, however, it can be said with a degree of certainty that the increasing protection had a short and troubled life.

The real economy, which is the engine of all employment development and growth forms, has not seen the hoped-for trend. It had to face the pandemic, which was unimaginable in 2015, making it impossible to see the expansive impact of increasing protection from an employment point of view over time. Regulatory measures by successive governments and, soon after by the Constitutional Court, were not long in coming, and they distorted the reform’s features, leaving little of what was initially envisaged.

The first blow to the increasing protections system was dealt with by the Dignity Decree (Decree Law no. 87/2018), which, without changing the formula for calculating the compensation due based on two months salary for each year of service, increased the compensation range from six to 36 monthly salary.

With surprising timing, a few days later, the Constitutional Court, no. 194/2018, declared the legislation unconstitutional insofar as it provided for a “rigid and automatic criterion, based on length of service” to identify the compensation due to an employee unjustly dismissed. In the Court’s view, the protection against damages required a quantification based on multiple factors (such as the parties’ behaviour and “conditions”) to be assessed at the judge’s discretion in adequately valuating compensation for the prejudice suffered by the worker.

In the space of a few weeks, the system designed to overcome discretion once again became centred on it.

Continue reading the full version published in Norme & Tributi Plus Diritto de Il Sole 24 Ore.

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

6 Feb 2026

Pay equity and transparency: draft implementing decree presented

Italy is among the first Member States to have adopted the draft implementing legislative decree of EU Directive 2023/970, which yesterday received its initial approval from the Council…

30 Jan 2026

A conviction for stalking can justify dismissal for just cause

With Ordinance No. 32952 of 17 December 2025, the Italian Supreme Court, Labour Section, ruled that a final conviction for stalking and abuse can justify dismissal for just…

30 Jan 2026

We continue to be a Great Place to Work!

For the third consecutive year, De Luca & Partners has been awarded the prestigious Great Place to Work® certification, a significant recognition of the value we place on…

29 Jan 2026

Italian Supreme Court: Employer Monitoring and the Use of Corporate Chats for Disciplinary Purposes

Corporate chats “intended for work-related communications by employees accessing them through company accounts constitute work tools, pursuant to Article 4, paragraph 2, of Law No. 300 of 1970,…

28 Jan 2026

Anti-union conduct: the Supreme Court moves beyond formalism and focuses on substance

With order no. 789 of 14 January 2026, the Italian Supreme Court addressed the issue of anti-union conduct by employers in relation to information and consultation obligations on…

27 Jan 2026

DID YOU KNOW THAT… the use of artificial intelligence may justify a dismissal for objective justified reason?

With Judgment No. 9135 of November 19, 2025, the Labour Section of the Court of Rome held that the dismissal for objective justified reason (i.e. “giustificato motivo oggettivo”,…