
The Wall Street Journal (3/14/23) reports with evident alarm that “France has one of the lowest rates of retirees at risk of poverty in Europe.”
“The Party Is Ending for French Retirees.” That’s the headline the Wall Street Journal (3/14/23) went with just days before French President Emmanuel Macron invoked a special article of the constitution to bypass the National Assembly and enshrine an increase in the retirement age in national law. The Journal proclaimed:
The golden age of French pensions is coming to an end, one way or another, in an extreme example of the demographic stress afflicting the retirement systems of advanced economies throughout the world.
The possibility that this “golden age” could be extended is not even entertained. Due to previous “reforms” (CounterSpin, 9/17/10), the pension of the average French person is already facing cuts over the coming decades. So preserving the current level of benefits would require strengthening the system. For the Journal, this is out of the question. Stingier pensions, on the other hand, are portrayed as the inevitable result of “demographic stress,” not policy choices.
The French people, by contrast, recognize that a less generous pension system is far from an inevitability. Protesters quickly took to the streets this January after the government unveiled plans to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64; one poll from that month found 80% of the country opposed to such a change. And as the government pushed the reform through in March, protests grew especially rowdy, with monuments of refuse lining the city’s streets and fires illuminating the Parisian landscape.
But that’s just how the French are, you know? They’re a peculiar people, much different from us Americans.
The French are built different

A New York Times profile (2/24/23) depicted Jean-Baptiste Reddé as “a kind of ‘Where’s Waldo?’ who invariably appears alongside unionists blowing foghorns and battalions of armor-clad riot police.”
As the New York Times’ Paris bureau chief Roger Cohen put it in a recent episode of the Daily (3/16/23), protesters have been “talking about how life begins when work ends, which is a deeply held French conviction, very different from the American view that life is enriched and enhanced by work.”
Left unmentioned is the fact that, for decades, Americans have consistently opposed increases to the Social Security retirement age, usually by a large margin (CounterSpin, 10/26/18). Moreover, two-thirds of the American public support a four-day workweek, and half say Americans work too much. How French of them.
US media (Extra!, 3–4/96) have taken to covering the uprising against pension “reform” in the same way the narrator of a nature documentary might describe the wilderness:
Now, we come to a Frenchman in his natural habitat. His behavior may give the impression of idleness, but don’t let that fool you. If prodded enough with the prospect of labor, he will not hesitate before lighting the local pastry shop ablaze.
The New York Times (2/24/23), for instance, ran an article in the midst of the protests headlined “The French Like Protesting, but This Frenchman May Like It the Most,” about a man who has “become a personal embodiment of France’s enduring passion for demonstration.” It followed that up with a piece (3/7/23) presenting French opposition to an increase in the retirement age as some exotic reflection of the French’s French-ness. A source attested to the country’s uniqueness: “In France, we believe that there is a time for work and then a time for personal development.”
Meanwhile, while the Washington Post has mostly been content to outsource coverage of the protests to Associated Press wires, it did run a piece (3/15/23) by one of its own reporters titled: “City of … Garbage? Paris, Amid Strikes, Is Drowning in Trash.”
The burden of old people

The Washington Post (3/17/23) urged the United States to join France in “forcing needed reforms to old-age benefit programs.”
This fairly unserious reporting on the protests contrasts sharply with the grave rhetoric deployed by the editorial boards of major newspapers in opposing the protesters’ demands. The Wall Street Journal (3/16/23), which has implored the French to face “the cold reality” of spending cuts, is not alone in its crusade against French workers. The boards of the Washington Post, Bloomberg and the Financial Times have all run similarly dour editorials promoting pension reform over the past few months.
Among these, only the Financial Times (3/19/23) opposed the French government’s remarkably anti-democratic decision to raise the retirement age without a vote in the National Assembly, opining that Macron’s tactics have both “weakened” him and left “France with a democratic deficit.”
The Washington Post (3/17/23), by contrast, suggested democratic means would have been preferable, but gave no indication of opposition to Macron’s move. (As FAIR has pointed out—3/9/23—the Post’s supposed concern for democracy doesn’t extend far beyond its slogan.) And the Wall Street Journal (3/16/23) actually saluted the move, remarking, “Give Mr. Macron credit for persistence—and political brass.”
The editorial boards’ case for pension reform is based on a simple conviction—French pensions are unsustainable—for which there are three main pieces of evidence.
First, the ratio of workers to retirees. The Wall Street Journal (3/14/23) included a graphic projecting the worker-to-retiree ratio through 2070:

The Wall Street Journal graphic (3/14/23) does not note that over this same time period, from 2019 to 2070, the percentage of French GDP spent on pensions is projected to decline from 14.8% to 12.6%.
As the graphic shows, this ratio has declined substantially since 2002, and is set to decline even more over the next several decades. This trend is referenced more or less directly in editorials by the Journal (3/16/23, 1/31/23, 1/13/23), the Washington Post (3/17/23) and the Financial Times (3/19/23).
The declining worker-to-retiree ratio is meant to inspire fear, but in and of itself, it’s not necessarily a problem. After all, the increased costs associated with a rising number of retirees could very well be offset by other factors. It is therefore much more useful to look directly at how much of a nation’s wealth is used to support retirees.
Which brings us to the second commonly cited piece of evidence: pensions as a percentage of GDP. This is mentioned in editorials by the Journal (3/16/23, 1/31/23, 1/13/23), Post (3/17/23) and Bloomberg (1/16/23).
As it turns out, there’s no problem to be found here. In its 2021 Aging Report, the European Commission estimates that, even without a rise in the minimum retirement age to 64, public pension spending in France would actually decline over the next several decades, dropping to 12.6% of GDP in 2070, down from 14.8% in 2019. Cost-saving factors, primarily the deterioration in benefit levels, would more than cancel out the increase in the number of retirees. In other words, there is no affordability crisis. It doesn’t exist.
Which side are you on?

For the Financial Times (1/10/23), cutting pensions is “indispensable” because “plugging a hole in the pension system is a gauge of credibility for Brussels and for financial markets which are again penalizing ill-discipline.”
The only actual evidence for the unsustainability of France’s pension system is the system’s deficit, which is projected to reach around €14 billion by 2030. This piece of evidence is cited in editorials by the Journal (1/31/23, 1/13/23) and the Financial Times (3/19/23, 1/10/23).
One solution to the deficit is raising the retirement age. Another is raising taxes. Oddly enough, the editorials cited above almost universally fail to mention the second option.
The only editorial board to bring up the possibility of raising taxes is the Financial Times’ (1/10/23), which comments, “Macron has rightly ruled out raising taxes or rescinding tax breaks since France’s tax share of GDP is already 45%, the second-highest in the OECD after Denmark.”
This statement says much more about the Times than it does about the reasonableness of raising taxes. Oxfam France (1/18/23) has estimated that a mere 2% tax on the wealth of French billionaires could eliminate the projected pension deficit. Rescinding three tax cuts that Macron’s government passed and that largely benefit the wealthy could free up €16 billion each year. That would plug the pension system’s projected deficit with money left over.
Which option you pick—increasing taxes on the wealthy or raising the retirement age—depends entirely on who you want to bear the costs of shoring up the pension system. Do you want the wealthy to sacrifice a little? Or do you want to ratchet up the suffering of lower-income folks a bit? Are you on the side of the rich, or the poor and working class? The editorial boards of these major newspapers have made their allegiance clear.




They hate the idealism of the young
And the “idle-ism” of the old
Ah, yes, the more perfect union.” AH, FAIRNESS: It’s a lovely thing.
In fact it’s a guarantee of sorts with the Preamble and as it begins with: ” We the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union…..”
Sadly it seems that the corporate ones seem to think that THEY are all that matters.
Too much money you say? Lions and Tigers and Bears, after all. When corporations have more rights than human beings——-PROBLEMS, PROBLEMS and more PROBLEMS! It’s impossible to have a MORE PERFECT UNION, with pretend humans in charge as in corporations.
Sadly, since WW 2 no one has really won any wars—but those military people get more and more money. WHY is that? Bush and Biden—how easily you spend the nations money, and how little We the People benefit. Is there a lesson here? YES!
PEOPLE matter more than money—-those who forget that lead the way into poverty and fear and a lessening of the good parts of life.Wake up elected ones and remember WE THE PEOPLE applies to ALL of us!
Does anyone know what happened to Bryice? I miss his articles and he was a top shelf writer with FAIR and he was great. As opposed to this new kid Conor BTW.
Excellent piece. All the attacks on the elderly in capitalist countries from the US to France and Britain, are of a piece. I had the interesting experience a few years back of visiting Finland and interviewing the head of the Finnish Social Security system. He explained that Finland dome 20 years ago had a funding crisis because of its graying population (far worse than the one currently being warned about by the Social Security “reformers” who want to raise the retirment age and cut benefits). He told me that the three main parties got together and worked out a solution. Their first step was to determine (get this!) what level of benefits would be needed so that nobody in the country would suffer a hit to their living standard when they retired. The answer they found was to replace 60% of final income at retirement with an annual benefit. They could do that because in Finland there is free college for anyone who is admitted, what at that time 8 years ago was a $600 monthly living stipend. That meant parents were absolved of having to pay for their kids’ college. Home mortgages were expected to be repaid in full by retirement (a condition of first mortgages in the UK I learned from my Oxford professor daughter who just bought a house with her husband with a 75% mortgage — they could only borrow an amount they could pay off before reaching 60). I assume Finland requires something similar. Health care is tax supported and free, so there are no health costs for the elderly. All this is funded by taxes on workers and on their employer, with employers contributing more, unlike in the US where the iron rule (for no valid reason) is a 50/50 split. Actually, since the boss gets to deduct the FICA tax as a business expense, it’s less for the boss than the worker. Finnish pensions, unlike US Social Security benefits are not taxable income. And the system is in balance. No fears of “insolvency.” The US should do the same. Of course, at least so far, Finland doesn’t shovel virtually it’s entire income tax haul into the maw of the military as the US does. But if we got rid of that, by cutting military spending by say 80% and applied the FICA tax to all income, and to short term stock and bond trades, we would not have any problem providing a decent retirement to every American. Of course raising the minimum wage nationally to $15 or $20 per hour, Social Security benefits to lower income workers would be far higher in retirement too. Could this be done? Of course, but US workers need to learn from the French and to take to the streets (and not to stay fenced in by police barricades) to demand it! I’m ready…
“Of course, at least so far, Finland doesn’t shovel virtually it’s entire income tax haul into the maw of the military as the US does.” Hum, life can change in a blink …
Meaning, sharing thousands of miles border with Russia and now, as a member of NATO, they are contributing over 4 percent of their GDP towards their military going forward.
Finland’s border with Russia is not ‘thousands of miles’, it is 1300 km, less than one thousand miles. That number has not changed the last 80 years.
Their military budget is not 4% of their GDP, but 2.25%.
As Bradley Grower also replies, Finland is no socialist paradise. It has elected a right-wing National Coalition party which seems likely to go into government with the far-right Finns party. Spending on making war in alliance with the USA instead of looking after its people is now the priority in Finland.
Finland is merely returning to the position it held in relation to the major imperialist powers in the decades immediately after independence, which was granted by the Bolsheviks shortly after the October Revolution in 1917. Finland first served as a major base of operations for the counterrevolutionary whites in the civil war, before going on to form an alliance with Nazi Germany during World War II as part of Hitler’s war of annihilation against the Soviet Union.
They don’t have any lobbyist in Finland?