Article 1 EEA establishes a ‘homogeneous European Economic Area’ that entails ‘the free movement of persons’. Nationals of the EEA EFTA States are afforded rights of movement and residence, regardless of whether they are economically active. The CJEU has characterized the legal status of EEA nationals as ‘objectively comparable’ with that of EU citizens. Differences between the rights protection afforded in the EEA EFTA pillar and the EU pillar will constitute discrimination. EU secondary legislation that pursues the aim of the fullest possible realization of the free movement of persons falls within the scope of Article 1 EEA and shall be implemented through Articles 98 and 102 EEA. The detailed regulation provided for by such measures makes Article 1(2)b EEA sufficiently precise and unconditional to be relied upon before courts. It affords EEA EFTA nationals a primary, written and individual right to free movement that is homogeneous with Article 21.1 TFEU.
Bekkedal et al. (Mon,) studied this question.