French govt open to talks as unions pursue pension strike

By AFP
December 13, 2019

PARIS: French officials said Thursday they were open to negotiating a plan that could push back many people´s retirement to 64, after unions vowed to maintain a transport strike through the year-end holidays unless the government backs down on its pension overhaul.

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"There´s room for negotiating, over the terms for arduous jobs, over the methods for balancing the budget," Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told France 2 television. Unions have unanimously reected the government´s plan for a single pension system that maintains the legal retirement age at 62, but with reduced payouts unless a person works until at least 64.

Even France´s moderate CFDT union, the country´s largest and long in favour of a single points-based system, said the government had crossed a "red line" and called for a fresh day of mass demonstrations for December 17. "To have a compromise within reach, and then throw it away over a question of budgetary dogmatism is a huge mistake," CFDT chief Laurent Berger told French daily Les Echos.

Public transport was again brought to a near standstill in Paris as workers walked off the job for the eighth straight day, forcing many schools to cancel classes and preventing many people from getting to work. "There won´t be any Christmas truce," warned Laurent Brun, head of the transport arm at France´s hard-line CGT union, the largest among public-sector workers including at rail operator SNCF.

"I´m sorry to say the strike will continue, because we didn´t want this, but the government is standing firm, so this is going to go on for a long time," he told France Info radio.

Le Maire called on the CFDT in particular to return to the bargaining table, saying the government was ready to hear its proposals. "We propose the age of 64, with a bonus and penalty system," he said. "Are there better solutions? Perhaps, so let´s discuss it."

Gilles Le Gendre, head of President Emmanuel Macron´s centrist lawmakers, also urged Berger to reopen talks. "Since yesterday, everyone is saying the age of 64 is set in stone, but that is not true," he told Cnews television.

Union workers blocked the major Atlantic shipping port at Le Havre on Thursday, and just one in four high-speed TGV and regional trains were running.

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