- Business
- Childbirth & Education
- Legal Formalities
- Motoring
- Other
- Pensions & Benefits
- Property & Accommodation
- Taxes
- Airports and Airlines Spain
- Paramount Theme Park Murcia Spain
- Corvera International Airport Murcia Spain
- Join us for Tea on the Terrace
- When Expat Eyes Are Smiling
- Meet Wincham at The Homes, Gardens & Lifestyle Show, Calpe
- QROPS 2014
- Spain Increases IHT in Valencia & Murcia
- Removals to Spain v Exports from Spain
- The Charm of Seville
- Gibraltar Relations
- Retiro Park : Madrid
- Community Insurance in Spain
- Calendar Girls
- Considerations when Insuring your Boat in Spain
- QROPS – HMRC Introduces changes that create havoc in the market place
- QROPS – All Change From April 2012
- Liva & Laia : 15th November

Experts are finally reaching an agreement on how to overhaul Spain's pension system, one of the country's great ongoing reforms after labor, healthcare and education. Specifically, they agree on the so-called "sustainability factor," which aims to make the pension scheme viable in the long run despite an ageing population and outlays that will soon outpace contributions.
The report that a government-appointed committee will have on its table for a final review on Monday recommends that changes become applicable as of next year, rather than 19 years from now as stipulated in the 2011 reform. It is a sign of the government's sense of urgency over Brussels' demands for more austerity measures.
The report contemplates two paths of adjustment: one for current and future pensioners, adjusting annual pension amounts to public revenues and expenditures and ending the link to rises in the consumer price index; another for future retirees, tying their pension calculations to life expectancy.
The report, which has already been investigated by El Pais, already has support among the majority of the committee members.
However, it does contemplate two possible scenarios: either implementing the changes progressively between 2014 and 2019, or waiting until 2019 to begin. But the majority position is clear: "The committee is in favor of early implementation," reads the text.
Brussels is demanding that the sustainability factor of the pension system go into effect before 2032, and it also feels that the reforms undertaken last year are a step in the right direction but are still insufficient.