Polish President Andrzej Duda proposed the nation hold a referendum on
Oct. 25 to reverse an increase in the retirement age pushed through by
his political opponents in the government.
The ballot is proposed to be conducted on the day Poland holds a general election, which opinion polls show will be won by the president’s allies in the Law & Justice opposition party. Poland’s Senate, where the ruling Civic Platform has a majority, needs to approve Duda’s proposal for it to be binding.
A referendum on the same day as the parliamentary elections “will be significantly cheaper than one held at a different date,” Duda said in a televised address. “It will let us know the will of Poles and will show the direction of changes society expects.”
The Civic Platform-led government increased the retirement age to 67 years in 2012 to ward off a looming budget crunch amid a demographic crisis. Law & Justice has made reversing the law, which according to business lobby group Pracodawcy PR would cost the budget 71.4 billion zloty ($19 billion) through 2020, a cornerstone of its election campaign.
“Clearly, a higher retirement age would be better for Polish public finances, so any final decision on lowering it would negatively impact the long-term assessment of economic fundamentals,” Piotr Kalisz, an economist at Citigroup Inc.’s Warsaw-based unit, said on Thursday. “I don’t expect any direct market reaction” to the referendum proposal, he said.
Law & Justice seek to lower the retirement age by seven years for women and by two years for men.
Besides the retirement question, Duda also proposed asking Poles whether they want to reverse the government’s decision to reduce the school age to six from seven as well as whether the country should ban the sale of state-owned forests.
Poland also faces a referendum on the country’s voting system on Sept. 6, which was called by Duda’s predecessor Bronislaw Komorowski before he lost his re-election bid in May.
Culled from Bloomberg
The ballot is proposed to be conducted on the day Poland holds a general election, which opinion polls show will be won by the president’s allies in the Law & Justice opposition party. Poland’s Senate, where the ruling Civic Platform has a majority, needs to approve Duda’s proposal for it to be binding.
A referendum on the same day as the parliamentary elections “will be significantly cheaper than one held at a different date,” Duda said in a televised address. “It will let us know the will of Poles and will show the direction of changes society expects.”
The Civic Platform-led government increased the retirement age to 67 years in 2012 to ward off a looming budget crunch amid a demographic crisis. Law & Justice has made reversing the law, which according to business lobby group Pracodawcy PR would cost the budget 71.4 billion zloty ($19 billion) through 2020, a cornerstone of its election campaign.
“Clearly, a higher retirement age would be better for Polish public finances, so any final decision on lowering it would negatively impact the long-term assessment of economic fundamentals,” Piotr Kalisz, an economist at Citigroup Inc.’s Warsaw-based unit, said on Thursday. “I don’t expect any direct market reaction” to the referendum proposal, he said.
Law & Justice seek to lower the retirement age by seven years for women and by two years for men.
Besides the retirement question, Duda also proposed asking Poles whether they want to reverse the government’s decision to reduce the school age to six from seven as well as whether the country should ban the sale of state-owned forests.
Poland also faces a referendum on the country’s voting system on Sept. 6, which was called by Duda’s predecessor Bronislaw Komorowski before he lost his re-election bid in May.
Culled from Bloomberg