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Retirees need at least €15,000 a year to live comfortably in France, finds report
This amount does not include the cost of accommodation or bills, and focuses only on commonly-used goods and services
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850,000 retirees in France will see their pension increase from October
Eligible pensioners will also receive an average €600 retrospective payment
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Can foreign retirees really claim ‘free pension’ after move to France?
We look at recent claims by far-right Rassemblement National president Jordan Bardella about the French Aspa benefit
Pension rises in France: how much more could I get from January?
Base pension rates are set to increase new figures from the government confirm
State pensions in France are set to rise by 1.1% in 2022 the government has confirmed. In 2021, they rose by 0.4%.
The increase will be applied to all base pension rates including for former civil servants, workers in the private sector and the self-employed.
Pension rates are calculated every year according to the Code de la Sécurité Sociale “based on a rating equal to the yearly average of consumer prices, excluding tobacco”.
The yearly average is based on calculations running from November one year to October the next compared with the rate of inflation from the same period the previous year.
The new rate for 2022 has been calculated after Insee released data detailing inflation rates for September and October 2021 on November 16.
In addition to this increase, pensioners with an income of less than €2,000 per month will be eligible for an ‘inflation allowance’ in February 2022 intended to help people combat the rising cost of living in France.
Read more: €100 for people in France with income of less than €2,000 a month
This bonus however does not apply to pensioners with foreign pension income.
Read more: €100 French inflation bonus: Foreign pension income not applicable
Complementary private pensions may also increase depending on the provider.
For example, unions and management at one provider, l’Agric-Accro, decided to increase 13 million pensions by 1% from November 1, 2021 – 0.5% less than inflation in November of the previous year – in order to balance losses of more than €4million caused by the health crisis.
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