European Commission - Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion

12/04/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/04/2025 03:51

Commission sets out roadmap for future-proof quality jobs in a competitive EU

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The European Commission has presented the Quality Jobs Roadmap, a strong commitment to improving job quality and creating high-quality and future-proof jobs in Europe. The Commission also launched a first-stage consultation on the forthcoming Quality Jobs Act, a new legislative proposal to ensure workers' rights while keeping up with technological, economic and societal changes.

Adequate wages and quality jobs are essential to boost productivity, strengthen Europe's competitiveness, and protect against in-work poverty. While job quality in the EU is generally high, workers continue to feel the impact of global crises and rising living costs. At the same time, companies face labour and skills shortages while striving to remain competitive in a fast-changing global environment.

The Roadmap focuses on the areas where EU action can make the greatest difference:

  • creating and maintaining quality jobs across the EU
  • ensuring fairness and modernisation in the world of work
  • supporting workers and employers in the green, digital and demographic transitions
  • strengthening social dialogue and collective bargaining
  • ensuring effective access to rights, quality public services and adequate investment

The Roadmap has been developed based on extensive consultations with European and national trade unions and employer organisations ('social partners'), mobilising around 200 organisations across the EU and engaging in more than 50 discussions in all Member States.

Towards a Quality Jobs Act

As announced by President von der Leyen in her 2025 state of the EU address and the Commission's 2026 work programme, the Commission will propose a Quality Jobs Act in 2026. The new law will update EU rules protecting workers while supporting productivity and competitiveness.

Today's first-stage consultation seeks social partners' views on the direction of EU action to improve job quality. The consultation highlights several areas that a future law could cover, including:

  • Algorithmic management and artificial intelligence (AI) at work: Digital tools are now central to working life. AI can save time and increase productivity. However, 84% of Europeans believe that these technologies must be carefully managed at work.
  • Safety and health at work: New technologies and mobile digital equipment have transformed workplaces and expanded remote work. Psychosocial and ergonomic risks at work have increased, highlighting the need to update EU rules on safety and health at work. In 2025, 29% of workers reported experiencing stress, anxiety or depression caused or worsened by their job, up from 27% in 2022, according to the latest EU-OSHA pulse survey.
  • Subcontracting: Subcontracting helps companies access expertise and innovate. However, it can also lead to abusive practices and poor compliance with labour, health, and safety regulations, especially in long and complex subcontracting chains.
  • Just transition: The green and digital transitions are driving companies across the EU to restructure, creating major challenges for both workers and employers.
  • Enforcement and role of social partners: Strong enforcement is essential for workers to benefit from their rights. Persistent issues such as undeclared work and weak compliance undermine job quality and fair competition.

This new consultation will complement the right to disconnect and telework consultation finalised in October 2025.

Next Steps

The first-stage consultation of social partners on the future Quality Jobs Act will run until 29 January 2026.

Background

President von der Leyen announced the Quality Jobs Roadmap in her 2024-2029 Political Guidelines to ensure competitiveness and prosperity in the EU.

The Quality Jobs Roadmap builds on several initiatives, all of which underline quality jobs as key to competitiveness, sustainable growth and a strong European social model:

Its priorities are reflected in the proposed Multiannual Financial Framework, which allocates at least 14% of national and regional partnership funding to EU social objectives.

More information

Quality Jobs Roadmap: Communication

First-stage consultation document on Quality Jobs Act

Quality jobs for companies and workers in Europe

Sources

Details

European Commission - Directorate-General for Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion published this content on December 04, 2025, and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed via Public Technologies (PUBT), unedited and unaltered, on December 04, 2025 at 09:52 UTC. If you believe the information included in the content is inaccurate or outdated and requires editing or removal, please contact us at [email protected]