Fortune | FORTUNE 09月17日
法国退休金制度优越,老年人收入相对较高
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

金融时报分析显示,法国65岁以上退休人员的收入已超过在职成年人的平均工资。这一现象与许多其他国家形成鲜明对比,多数国家退休人员的相对收入低于在职人员。法国的养老金制度在过去几十年里持续增长,政府在养老福利上的投入GDP占比显著高于其他国家。这得益于其养老金计算方式以及较高的替代率,使得法国退休人员能享受更充裕的退休生活,而其他国家,特别是美国,退休人员常面临收入不足的困境,不得不延长工作年限。

🌟 法国退休人员的相对收入优势显著:与大多数国家不同,法国65岁以上退休人员的平均月收入已略高于在职成年人。例如,截至2022年底,平均退休人员月收入约为1,626欧元,比在职成年人高出约2%。这一趋势在过去五十年中尤为明显,退休人员收入增长速度超过了在职人员。

💰 法国政府对养老福利的优先投入和优越的养老金计算方式是关键:法国政府在养老金福利上的支出占GDP比例持续增加,远超其发达国家同行。该国养老金制度允许退休人员领取其25个最高收入年份平均年收入的最高50%,并且通常需要工作42年才能获得全额养老金。与美国相比,法国的养老金替代率(约74%)远高于美国(约50%),这意味着法国退休人员能获得更高比例的退休前收入。

🌍 与其他国家退休人员的困境形成对比:文章指出,美国、英国和澳大利亚的退休人员在相对收入上都低于在职成年人,其中澳大利亚的差距最大。美国退休人员尤其面临收入不足的压力,近一半的退休美国人担心积蓄不足以支撑理想的退休生活,许多人被迫延长工作年限,甚至“活在噩梦中”。

⚖️ 法国养老金制度面临改革压力:尽管目前法国退休人员享受优厚的待遇,但政府正考虑提高法定退休年龄(目前为62岁)至64岁,以应对日益增长的养老金支出。此举已引起部分民众的反对,显示出维持现有福利水平所面临的财政挑战。

French retirees over the age of 65 now make more money relative to the average salary of working-age adults in the country, according to a Financial Times analysis of a recent Luxembourg Income Study. The average pensioner earned about €1,626 gross per month ($1,926) at the end of 2022, and currently earn around 2% more than working adults.

Although it’s a marginal gain, it’s the total opposite of retirees in most other nations; American pensioners earn about a sixth less in relative income compared to employed adults, U.K. retirees bring in about a fifth less, and retired Australians face the largest disparity, with a third less in income. 

However, the report notes that this is no new fad. In the five decades between 1970 and 2020, the cumulative increase in median income for working-aged French citizens between the ages of 18 and 64 rose by about 100%, while it increased by more than 160% for the nation’s retirees. 

While French retirees are enjoying the fruits of their labor and an envy-inducing pension plan, retirees across the world are working longer to simply make ends meet. 

Why French pensioners can afford to retire when other retirees can’t

Alongside more temperate living costs, French retirees enjoy more going back into their pockets because the government has prioritized retirement benefits. The country’s pension plan entitles them to reap a maximum of 50% of their annual average earnings, according to the Centre of European and International Liaisons for Social Security (Cleiss). 

Pensioners’ average yearly income is the gross earnings on which contributions have been paid, which is calculated based on the person’s 25 top-earning years. However, it should be noted that retirees must work for at least 42 years to receive the country’s full state pension.

And the country has continued to spend more on its pensioners; France has increased its share of GDP spent on old-age benefits and health/care by about 2.9% since 2001, according to the FT analysis. By comparison, its peer average rested at just over 1.5%. 

Meanwhile, retirees in other countries aren’t so lucky. As of 2023, France spends about 14% of its GDP on public pensions, while the U.S. spends about 7% comparatively. French retirees also get more bang for their buck compared to Americans—in the U.S., the average net pension replacement rate is 50%, while in France the replacement rate is about 74%. U.S. professionals at the end of their working lives simply earn less back. 

Plus, it takes longer to get the cash; Americans can’t access their Social Security retirement benefits until around 66 or 67, years later than their French counterparts. 

Americans are ‘living the nightmare’ and working well into their 70s

The U.S.’s relatively undesirable pension plans and sky-high living costs have forced Americans to work longer out of fear of running out of their savings. 

Over two in five retired Americans, representing about 20 million people, worry that their funds won’t be able to support their ideal retirement lifestyle according to an April survey from investment banking firm D.A. Davidson. And their lack of money has guilted many about kicking back after decades of employment, as around 60% of retired Americans wish they had a side gig to supplement their savings. 

Nearly 20% of retirees are “struggling” or “living the nightmare,” while only 5% said they were “living the dream,” according to Schroders’ 2025 US Retirement Survey.

While France’s retirees enjoy extra years of post-professional downtime compared to Americans working into their 70s, it may not be for much longer. To the behest of pensioners, that may change in the next five years, as in 2023 former Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne first revealed a plan to raise the nation’s retirement age from 62 to 64 by 2030. When the President of France, Emmanuel Macron, also proposed edging up the retirement age towards the norms of other Western countries, he was met with swift resistance. Funding the lives of pensioners has grown so great that these costs accounted for a sixth of the ministry of defense’s budget in 2024.

Fortune Global Forum

returns Oct. 26–27, 2025 in Riyadh. CEOs and global leaders will gather for a dynamic, invitation-only event shaping the future of business.

Apply for an invitation.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

法国退休金 养老金制度 退休收入 老年人福利 Financial Times Luxembourg Income Study French pensioners pension system retirement income elderly benefits
相关文章