Tamara K Hervey, Jean Monnet Professor of EU Law, University
of Sheffield
So
it would seem that my early
analysis of the implications of the European Commission’s 28 February draft
legal text on the Withdrawal Agreement for some of the people-related
aspects of health was too early. The
European Commission issued a revised
version of the text on 15 March 2018. Here are my views on the revised text as it
applies to patients, and in particular reciprocal healthcare between the UK and
the EU-27 post-Brexit. There are two key issues here:
·
The position of UK pensioners who have retired
to another EU country, or will do so in the future;
·
The EHIC for emergency care when visiting
another EU country, or when people from EU-27 countries visit the UK.
As I
said in the original blog, the text is complex, and like all legal texts, its
full implications will take time to emerge. So this is only a first take, and I
may well have got things wrong: if you spot anything I’ve missed or
misunderstood, please get in touch.
I
recognise, of course, that the process of the UK leaving the EU is a
negotiation, that this text is yet to be adopted by the EU-27 Council, much
less agreed between the EU and the UK, and that ‘nothing is agreed until
everything is agreed’. It remains prudent, therefore, also to plan for a
‘no-deal’ Brexit, where we leave without any Withdrawal Agreement.
Finally,
by way of introduction, I should say that I would love to be able to compare
this analysis with the UK’s preferred legal text. Sadly none is currently
available. And the Prime Minister’s speech,
on 2 March 2018, does not cover reciprocal healthcare explicitly at all.
The timeline:
The text proposes three periods of time, each of which
involves different legal rights and obligations:
·
now (while the UK is a Member State of the EU);
·
a transition period (which the UK government
calls an ‘implementation’ period), which starts when the WA enters into force on
30 March 2019 (Article 168) and ends on 31 December 2020 (Article 121); and
·
thereafter.
Whether
the precise dates survive the negotiation or not, we are talking about at least
three different timeframes, with the associated legal complexity.
It is not going to be
easy for people to understand what their rights are, how to enforce them, or
what obligations governments (the UK, and those of the EU-27) are under.
I
want to suggest in what follows that, implicit in the text of the WA as
proposed, is a fourth period of time – some way into the future – where no
further rights and obligations apply.
Where we are now
(this repeats my earlier blog for ease of reference):
To
grossly oversimplify, patients currently enjoy rights to cross-border
healthcare in the EU under four types of EU arrangements: S1 for residents in
another EU country; S2 and the Patients
Rights Directive for planned care; and EHIC for visitors. Because access to the UK NHS works on the
basis of residence, rather than
having paid tax or social security into the UK system per se, EU-27/EEA nationals who meet the NHS
‘ordinary residence’ test in the UK de
facto have a set of rights in domestic law too. (NB, the hyperlink is to
the rules for England: they are different in Scotland, Wales
and Northern Ireland.)
The
EU law entitlements essentially work on the basis of coordination of the very different social security systems across
the EU. They are part of EU law on free movement of people and EU citizenship,
but they do not depend on harmonisation
(or ‘regulatory alignment’) of national rules. Indeed the EU Treaties (in
Article 168(7) TFEU) rule out such harmonisation, referring to Member States’
responsibilities for “the definition of their health policy and for the
organisation and delivery of health services and medical care”, including “the
management of health services and medical care and the allocation of the
resources assigned to them.” Instead, the EU coordination rules operate to
smooth the way for people who cross the EU’s internal borders – to work, to
study, to retire, to visit. They protect people from the difficulties that
would otherwise arise from the differences in the organisation of social
security, and access to benefits, including access to healthcare within
national health systems.
One
way to think about it is to imagine an EU citizen, and her family, moving
around the EU, working and paying into the social security system in each state.
As she moves, she accrues a kind of ‘backpack’ full of the benefits they have
earned, which she and her family can then put together and call upon if they
need them, for instance, when they retire, or if they become too unwell to
work, or otherwise unemployed. (That’s called the principle of ‘portability’
and of ‘aggregation’). Another way to think about it is to realise that when an
EU citizen is in a different Member State from their ‘home’ Member State (who
is responsible for protecting them from the life events that social security
systems are there to help with), they are treated as if they were a national of the Member State they are in. (That’s
called the principle of non-discrimination.)
Finally,
to make sure that people are neither able to ‘double count’ benefits, nor fall
through the gaps, for each person there is a single ‘competent state’, which is
responsible for paying. That responsibility is irrespective of the country
which provides the benefit, or in the case of healthcare, medical treatment.
(That’s called the ‘single state rule’.)
So,
the British pensioners who have retired to the south of Spain are able to access
the Spanish health care system on the basis of the rights they have earned when
they worked in the UK. The UK pays for that healthcare; it’s provided by Spain,
and it’s provided on the same basis as for Spanish nationals.
All
of this is supported – as you might imagine – by a complex set of
administrative arrangements, supported by the EU. An Administrative Commission
for the Coordination of Social Security Systems is made up of one
representative of each of the Member States, plus the European Commission. It
deals with administration and interpretation of the rules, and promoting
collaboration (Regulation
883/2004, Articles 71 and 72). In
practice, it relies on a network of national competent authorities, which share
information so that they can effectively coordinate their activities. There is
an Electronic System
which supports exchange of social security information. EU data protection law
applies here.
Coordination
of social security is also an area where there is a great deal of litigation:
the rules are complex, and the CJEU is regularly called on to interpret what
they mean.
What the 15 March
Commission text proposes: who is covered?
Just
to get this out of the way first. There is – rightly – a huge amount of
attention being paid to the scope of the proposed provisions on citizens rights
under Title I of Part Two of the draft WA. But what matters for this blog is
that who is covered by those citizens’ rights provisions is explicitly ‘without
prejudice to Title III’ of the citizens’ rights Part of the WA, which is on
social security systems.
So,
if the WA is agreed as proposed, there will be one group of people who have
rights to reside (Articles 12-20), to be employed or self-employed (Articles 22-27),
and to be treated equally (with some significant exceptions) to nationals
(Article 21). There will be a different
group of people who have rights under the coordination of social security
provisions. One human being might be in both groups.
Again,
this will be complex, and it won’t necessarily be easy for people to know what
their rights are.
Who
will be covered? This is set out in Article 28 of the draft WA. The text echoes
the text of the key EU Regulation (883/2004),
Article 2, but less so in the 15 March version than before. The starting point
is to include people who ‘are subject to the legislation of’ either the UK or
an EU-27 Member State ‘at the end of the transition period’.
‘Subject
to’ is not a term that is defined either in the WA or in Regulation 883/2004.
The nearest we have to a definition is in recital 7 of the Regulation, which
simply says that, because there are major differences between Member States in
the scope rules for social security schemes, ‘it is preferable to lay down the
principle that this Regulation is to apply to nationals of a Member State,
stateless persons and refugees resident in the territory of a Member State who
are or have been subject to the social security legislation of one or more
Member States, as well as to the members of their families and to their survivors’.
In
what follows, I am taking the view that ‘subject to’ means ‘entitled to
benefits under’. That entitlement arises because of social insurance,
employment, self-employment or residence (the main types of access rules found
in the Member States for various benefits). However, it would be possible to
argue that ‘subject to’ has a broader meaning, and that someone who is excluded from entitlement to benefits
under the relevant legislation is nevertheless ‘subject to’ that
legislation. In the abstract, that
argument seems very far-fetched. But where, for instance, access to a benefit
is legally contested, for instance by someone resident in a state where benefit
access is at least in part based on residence, the litigation could be argued
to be ‘subject to’ that legislation.
‘The
legislation’ here is the social security legislation covered by Regulation
883/2004. That much is clear, as Article 29 (2) provides that ‘definitions in
Article 1 of Regulation 883/2004 shall apply’. Regulation 883/2004, Article 1 (l) defines
‘legislation’ as ‘laws [etc] relating to the social security branches covered
by Article 3 (1)’. Those include ‘(a) sickness benefits (ie healthcare);
maternity and equivalent paternity benefits; invalidity benefits; old age
benefits (ie pensions) … unemployment benefits, and family benefits’. From the
point of view of health, the key things that matter are that healthcare is
covered, and also that pensions are covered.
Regulation
883/2004 covers EU citizens, stateless persons and refugees, members of their
families, and survivors. It also covers nationals of other countries who are
not already covered by the Regulation solely because of their nationality. What
is important for cross-border health care is that you do not have to be or have
been resident in another Member State
to your home country to fall within the scope of the Regulation. It is enough
that you are ‘subject to the legislation’ of any Member State. Everyone who
meets the UK ordinary residence test for access to the NHS, for instance, is
‘subject to the legislation’ of the UK on this matter. Everyone across the EU,
including in the UK, who is entitled to an EHIC card is ‘subject to the
legislation’. When you visit another Member State, on holiday or for business,
the EHIC card entitles you to emergency care in the country you are visiting.
Unlike
the general WA provisions on EU citizenship, which only give rights to those who have exercised their rights to free
movement (for instance, by residing in a Member State of which they are not a
national), Article 28 (1), read alone, gives rights to everyone who is subject to social security legislation in either
the EU27 or the UK.
But
– critically in the 15 March draft – people enjoy rights under Title III only ‘for as long as they continue to be
in a situation involving both a Member State and the United Kingdom at the same
time’ (Article 28 (2)). It’s difficult
to be sure what is intended by this text, but it seems most likely that this is
intended to significantly reduce the scope of application of the Title from the
original text. Regulation 883/2004 works
by determining everyone who is covered by social security legislation, and then
making provision for what happens when someone moves around the EU. The draft
text of the Withdrawal Agreement, by contrast, draws its scope on the basis
that some people will be ‘in a situation involving both a Member State and the
United Kingdom’ at the same time. It is only
those people who are intended to be in the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement.
This
is an extraordinarily loose piece of drafting. Some people are obviously in
such a situation: frontier workers would be an example. Someone who resides in
an EU-27 Member State but receives a UK pension, or other benefit, would be
another. But what about someone who resides in an EU-27 Member State, receives
a UK benefit, and visits another EU-27 Member State? Does the text mean that ‘a
Member State’ can only be one Member
State (plus the UK); or can it be more
than one Member State (plus the UK)? What about someone who resides in an
EU27 Member State and regularly visits the UK (or vice versa)? What about
someone who intends to do so, even if they don’t regularly do so? All of those
people were within the scope of Regulation 883/2004: the text implies that not
all will be within the scope of Title III of the WA. This is further elaborated in Article 29a,
which modifies the scope rules in Article 28.
What
it might mean for healthcare entitlements is elaborated below.
What the Commission
text proposes: what are their rights?
Article
29 no longer talks about ‘rights’ or ‘principles’ applying. Instead, it says
that ‘the rules’ set out in Regulation 883/2004, and its implementing
legislation Regulation 987/2009, ‘shall apply’. These rules are encapsulated in
the principles of portability, aggregation, non-discrimination, and prevention
of overlapping benefits/single state rule. But those principles are no longer explicitly
included in the text. An interpretation that suggests that everyone now within
the system of EU coordination of social security would continue to be within it
under the WA is now not consistent with the WA text. The new Article 29 text
ties the application of the rules of the Regulation explicitly to those within
the (now more narrowly drawn) scope rules of the Withdrawal Agreement.
And,
further, there is a new Article 29a (‘special situations covered’) which
derogates from Article 28. It’s unclear whether this derogation is intended to extend the scope of the rules in Article
28, or to narrow them. In one regard, it extends the scope of the rules,
by including some EU-27 nationals/UK nationals who are not ‘subject to’
UK/EU-27 legislation at the end of the transition period, but have been subject to it. The ‘are or have been’ text of the earlier
draft has been moved from Article 28 to Article 29a.
Paragraph
1 (a) of Article 29a derogates from Article 28 (the scope rules) ‘to the extent
set out below’, ie in the rest of Article 29a. It extends the scope of the WA
to EU citizens who have been subject
to UK social security legislation before the end of the transition period, but are no longer subject to that
legislation, and vice versa for UK
citizens subject to EU-27 social security legislation. Those people fall within
the scope of Title III of the citizens’ rights part of the WA, for the purposes
of relying on and aggregating periods of insurance, employment, self-employment
or residence. This covers an EU-27 citizen who has worked some of her life in
the UK, but is now ‘subject to’ the legislation of another EU Member State
(either that of which she is citizen, or another one), because she now works
there, or resides there. Under the WA, she can rely on the period of time
aggregated through the period of employment or residence in the UK for the
purposes of receiving benefits (such as healthcare) that are based on
aggregated periods of time. Likewise, a
UK citizen who is no longer subject to the legislation of an EU-27 Member State
can also rely on the WA to aggregate social security entitlements earned during
the time that she was subject the legislation of that Member State.
Article
29a includes a revised and clarified provision on planned healthcare. It provides that the rules of Regulation
883/2204 (Articles 20 and 27) continue to apply to someone who ‘who has begun a
course of planned health care treatment before the end of the transition period
in a Member State or in the UK, while that State was not the competent State,
until the end of the treatment’ (Article 29a (1) (b)). Reimbursement procedures
apply even after the treatment ends. ‘Until the end of the treatment’ is
presumably intended to include all phases of treatment, including follow up
care. The text does not refer to planned healthcare under the Patients’ Rights
Directive; only under Regulation 883/2004. Future access to planned healthcare
is not included, unless someone who seeks to access planned healthcare that
begins after the end of the transition period can be said to be ‘in a situation
involving both a Member State and the United Kingdom’ at the end of the
transition period. This might be the case, for instance, if someone’s cross
border planned healthcare is part of a clinical trial to which the person is
recruited in the run up to the end of December 2020. (Note that some Member
States, including the UK, do not authorize experimental treatments under S2.)
But otherwise, UK patients seeking planned crossborder healthcare in the EU-27
(and vice versa) after the end of
transition will not be within the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement.
The
previous text had nothing explicit in the text on EHIC healthcare. This is now
covered in Article 29a (1) (c). It provides that the rules on EHIC healthcare
apply to ‘a person, covered by Regulation 883/2004, who is staying at the end
of the transition period in a Member State or the United Kingdom, until the end
of the stay’. This text excludes future
application of EHIC rights. As with the provision on planned crossborder health
care, its implication is that ‘a situation involving both a Member State and
the United Kingdom at the same time’ in Article 28 (2) is not intended to
include a future intention to rely on accrued EHIC rights after the end of the
transition period.
The
provision on healthcare for pensioners has been tidied up (the puzzling word
‘becomes’ has been removed). It’s now in Article 29a (2):
“If, following the grant of a pension or a benefit
based on periods of insurance, employment, self-employment or residence in
accordance with point (a) of paragraph 1 of this Article,
(a)
the United Kingdom is competent for the sickness
benefits of a person residing in a Member State, or
(b)
a Member State is competent for the sickness
benefits of a person residing in the United Kingdom,
that person, as well as
his or her family members and survivors, shall be entitled to sickness benefits
as set out in Articles 22 to 30, 33 and 34 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 (in
the case of a pensioner or a pension claimant), or Articles 17 to 21, 33 and 34
of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004 (in the case of a person receiving a benefit
other than pension). The corresponding reimbursement procedures shall apply.
This provision shall
apply mutatis mutandis as regards
family benefits based on Articles 67 to 69 of Regulation (EC) No 883/2004.
‘Sickness
benefits as set out in Articles 22 to 30, 33 and 34 of Regulation (EC) No
883/2004 (in the case of a pensioner or a pension claimant)’ is healthcare
cover for pensioners. Essentially the rules are that if someone is entitled to
a pension from at least one Member State, they are entitled to receive
healthcare in another Member State in which they reside, on the same basis as
the residents of that Member State. The costs of the healthcare are borne by
the Member State responsible for the pension. This is the basis of the S1
scheme. They are also entitled to EHIC health care, or, with authorization,
planned care under the S2 scheme, in a Member State which they visit.
As
originally drafted the provision didn’t explicitly deal with the UK pensioners
who have worked all their life in the UK, and then retired to Spain (or another
EU country): the biggest group of recipients of cross-border health care who
are concerned about the effects of Brexit. It still doesn’t do so explicitly.
But they fall within the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement (Article 28) because
they are ‘subject to’ the social security legislation under Regulation 883/2004,
and are in a ‘situation involving both a Member State and the UK at the same
time’ at the end of the transition period. They will be able to continue to
rely on their rights under the WA, until they cease to meet those conditions.
This is good news, not only for those pensioners, but also for the NHS which
will not have to plan for their mass return.
What the Commission
text proposes: the time frame
Most
of the provisions in the WA have a tight temporal limitation: they cease at the
end of the transition/implementation period. In this draft, unlike the earlier
one, a similar temporal limitation has been added to Title III on social
security coordination. The general rule is that it continues as long as someone
continues to be in a situation involving both a Member State and the UK at the
same time. For UK pensioners accessing
healthcare in Spain, that will potentially be the rest of their lives (Article
35), unless they return to the UK. But Article
29a precludes an interpretation of the general rule to include post-transition
planned healthcare or emergency healthcare under EHIC.
Conclusion and implications
Continued
access to the EHIC scheme is something that both Jeremy
Hunt and David Davis
have said that the UK would seek to negotiate. Indeed, Jeremy Hunt described it
as ‘perfectly
possible’ in January 2017; and Davis said in Parliament
that it had been ‘agreed’ in August 2017. Presumably it could be negotiated as
part of the future EU-UK relationship(s), and that would cover people not
within the scope of the Withdrawal Agreement (for instance, because they are
yet to be born). However, as I suggested in my previous blog, it would be
better if it were included in the Withdrawal Agreement too.
Barnard & Peers: chapter 27
Photo credit: Sutter Healthcare
Thank you very much for this wonderful piece of analysis. Assuming a state "when everything is agreed" my English wife and I a Dutchman resident in the UK since 1975 will be ok as pensioners whatever we decide to do before or after Brexit.
ReplyDeleteThat's nice to hear. Wishing you all the best in your retirement and happy that you are resident in the UK.
DeleteWell done for your analysis. Mind you, if you as a Professor in European Law are struggling to interpret some of the clauses, just imagine how your average expat is going to get his/her head around it!
ReplyDeleteIt looks though that the end of the transition period is going to be a critical cut-off date. People will essentially have to have made up their mind before then, where to settle, along with their family members and future partners. Presumably, that may also seal their fate should they change their mind about where to settle at a later time. Clearly, for the vast majority, having access to benefits, healthcare etc. are equally as important as formal right of abode.
I hope the rights of UK expats to move later to other EU27 states is not negotiated away.
Finally, I continue to be unnerved by the "nothing's agreed, until everything's agreed" line, which Barnier is now using as often as Davis was. The cynic in me suggests that it is way of pulling citizens rights back into the negotiating pot, whereas it should clearly be ring-fenced, if both UK and EU leaders are true to their word that this is their first priority.
Dear Alex
DeleteIn many ways, that is my key point. These are people's rights. They should be able to understand them. At the moment, there is a really good European Commission-sponsored website that explains them in a lot of detail, including allowing you to put any two Member States into a search engine, and see what the arrangements are. Are we going to have anything like this for the Withdrawal Agreement? An austerity-driven government and a cash-strapped EU might not provide.
As for your substantive points, there will be possibilities for people to move after the end of transition. But those will be based on national law - of each Member State, and of the UK - not on EU law.
I agree wholeheartedly with your last point, and Steve Peers has argued on this blogsite that the citizens rights parts of the WA should be agreed formally now.
Yours
Tammy
Thank you everyone for your interest in this post on Twitter. Some further questions have come up there and I'm going to have a go at answering them here as they come in rather than scattering them over Twitter.
ReplyDeleteFirst one (from @akentishlass): "Wasn't quite clear from text, are pension healthcare arrangements s1 to continue AFTER transition for EU cits who have a British pension but move to an EU27 state? This seems important."
I agree it's important. It all depends on how we interpret people who ‘are subject to the legislation of’ either the UK or an EU-27 Member State ‘at the end of the transition period’. As I said in the blog, I've interpreted that as 'in receipt of benefits from'. But it could equally have a different meaning, such as 'resident in'; 'a citizen of/dependent of citizen of'; or even 'someone intending to become 'subject to' in the future' (which is pretty much the current scope of the Regulation).
The scope of this part of the WA extends only to people who are 'in a situation involving both a MS and the UK at the same time'. Again, it depends on what 'in a situation' means, but again the most obvious meaning is that someone needs to be, say, resident in a MS, and entitled to benefits from the UK, or vice versa, to fall within this clause. Future intention to move to another MS and reside there (or visit) probably wouldn't be enough.
So I think that, if we go with my interpretation, an EU citizen who is 'subject only to' UK law (let's say because she has worked all her life there) at the end of the transition period, is NOT within the scope of this part of the Withdrawal Agreement. That would mean that she cannot take her UK pension to an EU Member State after that date.
Of course, this *could* be something that is negotiated in the future EU-UK relationship(s). But it would be so much better to include it in the WA.
Yours
Tammy