Gulf Today

France must raise pension age from 62 to 64, says PM

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PARIS: France’s prime minister insisted on Sunday that the government’s plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 is “no longer negotiable,” further angering parliament­ary opponents and unions who plan new mass protests and disruptive strikes this week.

Raising the pension age is one part of a broad bill that is the flagship measure of President Emmanuel Macron’s second term. The bill is meeting widespread popular resistance - more than 1 million people marched against it earlier this month - and misunderst­anding about what it will mean for today’s French workers.

In an interview with France-info radio broadcast Sunday, Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne said the age “is no longer negotiable.”

Retirement at 64 and a lengthenin­g of the number of years needed to earn a full pension “is the compromise that we proposed ater having heard employers’ organisati­ons and unions,” she said.

A union-led online petition against the retirement plan saw a surge in new signatures ater Borne’s comments. France’s eight leading unions are in discussion­s on Sunday about a joint response to her remarks, according to officials with the FO and CFDT unions.

Lawmaker Manuel Bompard, whose France Unbowed party is leading the parliament­ary push against the reform, called for “the biggest possible” turnout for upcoming strikes and protests.

“We have to be in the streets Tuesday,” he said on BFM television on Sunday.

The government says the reform is necessary to keep the pension system solvent as France’s life expectancy has grown and birth rates have declined.

“Our aim is to ensure that in 2030 we have a system that’s financiall­y balanced,” Borne said.

Unions and let-wing parties want big companies or wealthier households to pitch in more to balance the pension budget instead.

Borne suggested openness to adjustment­s on how the reform addresses time that people take out of their careers to bear children or pursue education. The plan’s critics say women are unfairly targeted; Borne disagreed, but said, “We are in the process of analysing the situation.”

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