© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators and French CGT workers union workers attend a demonstration as part of a day of strike and nationwide protests to push for government measures to tackle inflation, workers’ rights and pension reforms, in Paris, France, September 29.
Written by Caroline Baileys and Lee Thomas
PARIS (Reuters) – French Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne will on Tuesday unveil details of a pension reform that has already angered unions and a large majority of voters and will be a major test of President Emmanuel Macron’s ability to deliver change.
One thing is clear: the French will have to work longer than they do now.
The most likely scenario is for the government to raise the retirement age to 64 from the current 62. Macron initially relied on 65, but capitulating for a year would make it easier to adopt the reform in Parliament.
What is also certain: the government is heading towards a clash with the trade unions. All of them, including the moderate, reform-minded CFDT, said they were against increasing the retirement age.
For them 64 or 65 doesn’t matter much. Either is prohibited.
But the age target is key for another group – conservative Republicans (LR). How lawmakers vote will make or break reform in Parliament, where Macron lost his outright majority last year.
LR may have lost a lot of MPs in last year’s elections, but their MPs, plus some centre-right allies as well as Macron’s centrist group, would be enough to push through reform.
Eric Ciotti, the new LR chairman, said he would support the reform – if its conditions were met, including an increase in the retirement age to 64 from 65 and an increase in the minimum pension for all, rather than just recent retirees.
However, not all members of his party agreed to this, so there is still some uncertainty.
But at this point it looks like the biggest challenge will be in the streets.
It is unclear whether unions will be able to bring together enough people, angry not only over pension reform but also over issues such as the cost-of-living crisis, to block Macron’s plans.
protests
Pension reform in France, where the right to retire on a full pension at 62 is deeply cherished, is always a very sensitive issue and even more so now with growing social discontent over the cost of living.
Currently having one of the lowest retirement ages in the industrialized world, France spends more than most other countries on pensions at nearly 14% of economic output, according to the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development.
But opinion polls show that pension reform is unpopular.
Only 27% of voters approve of an increase in the retirement age – most of them back to 64, not 65 – an Elabe poll for BFM TV showed last week. About 47% do not want to change the retirement age and 25% want to retire sooner.
Macron was forced to put the first pension reform attempt on ice in 2020 as the government scrambled to contain the coronavirus outbreak and save the economy.
Now, although the latest strike has been limited to specific sectors, such as refineries and airlines, anger over pension reform could easily spark broader protests.
But government spokesman Olivier Ferrand said: “We are not reforming pensions to be popular but to be responsible. We will go all the way because it is the only way our social model can survive.”