Jacques Serais, edited by Juliette Moreau Alvarez 06:11, January 10, 2023, modified at 06:14, January 10, 2023

This Tuesday, Elisabeth Borne and several of her ministers are finally presenting the pension reform.

There is a good chance that the Prime Minister will stick to her position and propose a minimum pension of 1,200 euros for new retirees.

Nevertheless, this measure could perhaps be extended to all pensioners.

TO ANALYSE

One more step for pension reform.

The Prime Minister will present the famous text this Tuesday at 5.30 p.m., alongside Bruno Le Maire, Olivier Dussopt and Stanislas Guerini.

This presentation will conclude three months of consultations and dialogue between the executive and the unions since the beginning of October.

The text will be presented to the Council of Ministers on January 23, before being examined by the National Assembly and the Senate from the beginning of February.

Elisabeth Borne should announce the postponement of the legal age from 62 to 64, as well as the extension of the contribution period.

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No announcement effects

However, one point still remains unresolved, the question of increasing the contributory minimum to 85% of the minimum wage.

Will it be applied to everyone or only to new retirees?

Elisabeth Borne should not answer these questions and will stick to what she has already announced, barring a dramatic change;

that is to say a minimum pension of 1,200 euros only for new retirees.

This Tuesday, there should therefore be no announcement effect.

The key word of the press conference of the day will be pedagogy, to explain the various measures already made public.

This includes a retirement age shifted to 64 for all those born after 1968 and an extension of the contribution period to 43 years to benefit from a full pension.

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See you at the Assembly?

However, the minimum pension of 1,200 euros for all retirees is not ruled out.

“We will leave that to the parliamentary debate”, believes an adviser to the executive.

The Republicans are also ready to table an amendment to this effect.

Some of the walkers are also in line to defend this measure.

“We have to leave a little biscuit to the deputies”, loose a relative of a minister.

The idea, here again, is for the executive to demonstrate that a new method is, apparently, at work.