Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

France plan to raise retirement age sparks strike threat

‘I’m well aware that changing our pension system raises questions and fears among the French,’ the prime minister says

Elizabeth Pineau
Paris
Wednesday 11 January 2023 21:10 GMT
Comments
Government set to announce plans for raising retirement age

People in France should work two years longer before they can retire, prime minister Elisabeth Borne has said, detailing an unpopular reform of the pension system that has brought the threat of strikes.

The long-delayed overhaul pushes the retirement age to 64, a move opposed by four in every five citizens according to an Odoxa poll, at a time when many are already struggling with a cost of living crisis.

“I’m well aware that changing our pension system raises questions and fears among the French,” Ms Borne said on Tuesday, adding that her government would work on convincing the French that the reform was necessary.

“We offer today a project to balance our pension system, a project that is fair,” she said.

Overhauling the pension system was a central pillar of Mr Macron’s reformist agenda when he entered the Elysee Palace in 2017. But he shelved his first attempt in 2020 as the government battled to contain the Covid-19 outbreak.

The second attempt will not be any easier. The heads of France’s leading unions are meeting to discuss responding with protests and strikes. The CFDT – France’s biggest union – has already threatened protest, having abstained from actions three years ago despite misgivings about the reform before it was shelved.

“If the retirement age is pushed back to 65 or 64, the CFDT will do what we’ve said we’ll do, we will resist this reform by calling on workers to mobilise,” CFDT head Laurent Berger said recently.

Mr Macron and Ms Borne will also need to get the reform adopted in parliament, where they do not have an absolute majority.

That looks less challenging than it did a few weeks ago after the government made some concessions to the conservative Les Republicains (LR) party. Even so, LR did not get all it wanted and it is not united on the issue, so every vote will count.

With one of the lowest retirement ages in the industrialised world, France spends more than most other countries on pensions at nearly 14 per cent of economic output, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.

In practice, according to the government’s proposal, the age at which one can retire and get a pension in France will be raised gradually by three months per year, starting this September, reaching 63 years and 3 months in 2027 and the target age of 64 in 2030.

To receive a full pension, it will be necessary, from 2027, to have worked 43 years.

“We must face reality and find solutions to preserve our social model,” Ms Borne said, stressing that France’s neighbours in Europe have also increased the retirement age over the past years.

Mathilde Panot, from the left-wing France Insoumise (France Unbowed) party, tweeted that the plan was “archaic, unfair, brutal, cruel”.

Reuters

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in