From September 1, 2023, the minimum retirement age to benefit from a full state pension, currently 62, will rise by 3 months per year until eventually reaching 64 years of age by 2030.
The retirement law reform also includes higher pension contributions for both public and private sector employers.
There are other less talked-about provisions that will still impact businesses: for instance, a greater number of employees will be able to claim what’s known as the ‘professional prevention account’ (le compte professionnel de prévention or C2P). This scheme allows for employees whose job exposes them to ‘high-risk’ factors (extreme noise or temperatures, night shifts, repetitive physical tasks…) to take job conversion training, reduce their working hours or take early retirement. All employers will have to evaluate these risk factors for their employees and update this assessment annually.
For more details on the C2P, you can consult the government website (link in French).
Another measure is what’s called the ‘senior index’ (l’index senior). This is designed to protect workers aged over 55, who are proportionally under-employed in France compared to other EU countries. From November 1 this year, companies of 1,000 employees or more will have to publish annual figures showing how many over-55s are on their payroll. From July 1, 2024 this obligation will be extended to all companies with 300 or more full-time staff.
What does this mean for a business owner?
Companies may well have to adapt their HR policies to comply with the reformed retirement law. This could mean planning for longer working lives, accommodating more senior employees and giving them career flexibility through training. It could involve enhancing progressive retirement or cumulative employment-retirement schemes that make the transition between an active working life and retirement smoother.
For your bottom-line, it will also mean factoring new pension contribution rates into financial planning.