In the UK government’s response to the Taylor Review (2018[12]), it accepted a number of recommendations aimed at strengthening penalties for employers who break the law, including: quadrupling the maximum penalty for aggravated breach of employment law; introducing uplifts in compensation for repeated breaches in similar cases; and introducing a scheme to name and shame employers who fail to pay employment tribunal awards and simplifying the enforcement process for individuals in this situation.
Although not specifically targeted at new forms of work, the Canada Labour Code is being amended to strengthen compliance and enforcement measures. Key measures include public naming of violators in the case of repeat or serious offences and prohibiting serious violators from being awarded federal contracts.
In Australia, the Fair Work Amendment (Protecting Vulnerable Workers) Act 2017 introduces higher penalties for deliberate and systematic underpayments, increased penalties for record keeping and payslip failures, and new penalties for deliberately hindering or obstructing inspectors. As a response to the work of the Australian Black Economy Taskforce, the Australian government is consulting with stakeholders on amending the Fair Work Act to increase penalties for sham contracting.
“The Australian Government is strongly committed to workers receiving the fair and proper entitlements and reinforces that all businesses, including those in the platform-based economy that treat workers as independent contractors must ensure that they have categorised workers correctly” – Australian questionnaire response
In Austria, laws brought in through the Wage and Social Dumping Control Act (since 2011) have strengthened penalties for underpayment, not just in respect of the national minimum wage but also in respect of collective agreements. There are now increased penalties for refusal to provide wage documentation, which underpaying firms had previously exploited.
Other countries (Lithuania, Hungary, the Slovak Republic and Poland) also reported higher sanctions for repeat violations. In Poland, if such violations are considered continuous and repeated, it may be assessed whether they meet the criteria of crime. If so, and if such violations are malicious or persistent, the punishment could be imprisonment. In Saudi Arabia, the Ministry of Labour can suspend services for employers who repeatedly break the law. Cyprus and Romania reported recent increases in financial penalties for undeclared work.