Employment law 5 in 5: January 2026

3 February 2026 3 min read

By Sarah Hellewell and Cassie Boyle

At a glance

  • Global employment trends and predictions.
  • Developments in the US.
  • Discrimination grievances in Singapore.
  • EU Pay Transparency Directive.
  • Join our upcoming events. 

Reminder: Global employment trends and predictions

Released in December, our global report reviewing 2025 and previewing 2026, helps you stay ahead of trends impacting global employers. You can also watch our Global employer briefing Q4: Year in review/2026 preview here.

For GENIE subscribers, we have produced country-by-country reviews of 2025 and 2026 previews for 52 jurisdictions across EMEA, Asia Pacific, and the Americas. If you are not yet a GENIE subscriber, you can register here. Please note that GENIE is a resource for clients of DLA Piper.

Focus: Developments in the US

In the US, worker mobility remains a core regulatory and enforcement theme. On January 27, 2026, the Federal Trade Commission hosted a workshop as part of the Administration’s efforts to highlight the negative impact of noncompete agreements. Meanwhile the newly proposed ERISA Litigation Reform Act aims to create a clearer and more predictable framework for ERISA‑related litigation.

Employers face new state law obligations, including:

Prepare: Discrimination grievances in Singapore

New laws have been finalised in Singapore setting the framework for handling workplace discrimination disputes. Expected to take effect by end‑2027, the laws introduce a three‑stage dispute resolution process: internal grievance handling, mandatory mediation and adjudication by the Employment Claims Tribunal or High Court. Employers must establish clear written grievance procedures and are recommended to begin preparing policies, training, and documentation to comply with upcoming obligations.

Monitor: EU Pay Transparency Directive

As the 7 June 2026 deadline for transposition of the EU Pay Transparency Directive approaches, several countries have made legislative progress. Finland has published a draft proposalThe German Commission for Implementation has published its final reportIn the Netherlands, the draft implementing bill has moved to the Council of State. And Poland has published draft legislation, after already implementing some of the requirements in December 2025.

For information on gender pay transparency in 45 countries across the world,  access the most recent edition of Gender pay transparency: A global guide to reporting obligations.  

Attend: Join our upcoming events

Mark your calendar for 17 March and watch for an invitation to our Q1 Global Employer Briefing webinar. Register for our webinar on the EU Forced Labour Regulation on 18 March. And join us in person in Dublin on 12 March for our conference on restructuring.