Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Retirement age rises for Swiss women

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GENEVA — Swiss voters on Sunday narrowly backed a proposal to raise the retirement age for women from 64 to 65, public broadcaste­r SRF reported.

A separate proposal to impose stricter animal welfare rules for livestock was heading for a big defeat, SRF also reported.

The change means the Swiss pension system would require women to work an extra year before becoming eligible for full retirement pay benefits. Men already have to work until 65 to get full benefits.

It’s part of a law already passed by parliament, but requiring voter approval, that also would involve raising the country’s value-added tax to help replenish funds in the Swiss pension system. Officials say the number of retirees is growing faster than the number of working people.

Such steps are seen as needed to shore up the statebacke­d pension fund over the next decade, as baby boomers increasing­ly retire and people overall have been living longer, especially women.

Opponents said the change weighs entirely on the shoulders of women, whose pay through the retirement scheme is usually less than what men receive — and will only accentuate inequaliti­es and unfairness they say have long bedeviled women in Switzerlan­d.

SRF reported the retirement measure passed narrowly — 50.6% in favor to 49.4% against. Backing was strongest in the German-speaking parts of Switzerlan­d, while a majority of those in the French and Italian-speaking cantons (states) voted against it.

The proposal to improve the living conditions of its livestock was brought by environmen­tally minded groups that want to end “intensive breeding” — where animals are often confined in tight spaces — and require more humane living conditions for them.

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