Pensions, Durigon comes out and promises: "The budget will stop the increase in pension requirements."

"I have already spoken with Minister Giorgetti and confirmed his willingness to include the measure in the Budget Law," said Undersecretary of Labor Claudio Durigon in an interview with Sussidiario.net during the Rimini Meeting, regarding the freezing of the retirement age requirement, which would otherwise increase starting in 2027. For the Undersecretary for Social Security, the so-called Giorgetti bonus is also "fundamental," "a measure," he emphasized, "that strengthens workers' freedom, whether it means staying in their job or being able to retire earlier."
READ ALSO: Giorgetti Bonus, paychecks will increase from September: here's how much it's worth and who it's forDurigon: "Quota 103 is not optimal for retirement flexibility. " Opzione Donna "should be strengthened because it currently appears to be an inefficient measure and has had little appeal. Quota 103, however, given its low utilization, I don't think it can represent an optimal form of retirement flexibility." This was stated by Undersecretary of Labor Claudio Durigon in an interview with Sussidiario.net during the Rimini Meeting regarding pension measures in preparation for the next budget. To strengthen the benefits of those retiring under the contributory system, Durigon stated, "we need a mechanism that incentivizes investment in future pensions, through the second pillar, which we have already begun to further integrate with the first pillar, also to meet the requirements for retirement." The effort will be "strengthened" by allowing early retirement at age 64 with 25 years of contributions, provided that the future benefit is at least three times the minimum pension, including through the use of supplementary pensions. The threshold of 64 years of age, adds the undersecretary, "seems to me to be fair and appropriate given the current world of work."
Durigon: "Lega's budget includes proposals to avoid contract vacancies." "The League has proposals to streamline bargaining and avoid prolonged contract vacancies, in some cases up to eight years, which harm workers and their wages. At the very least, new salary levels resulting from renewals should be effective from the day the contract expires." This was stated by Undersecretary of Labor Claudio Durigon in an interview with Sussidiario.net during the Rimini Meeting regarding the proposals for the next budget. "Through advances or increases tied to cost-of-living trends, and tax breaks for renewals that occur at the right time," he explains, "this objective can be achieved, leaving it up to the parties to identify the most appropriate mechanism." As for hiring bonuses, "employment in our country," says Durigon, "has grown thanks in part to this type of instrument, which has proven to work, and therefore we will likely continue to implement them."
Affari Italiani