Chile 2026 public sector law: 36 articles approved amid 'omnibus' controversy

In the latest on Chile's record 129-article Public Sector Readjustment Law, submitted last week, Congress approved 36 articles on Wednesday despite backlash over 100+ miscellaneous add-ons. Labor Minister Boccardo defends the measures as essential updates, while critics decry the 'denatured omnibus' bill lacking funding clarity. Average 2.8% salary hike carries US$1.7 billion cost.

Following the government's submission of Chile's 2026 Public Sector Readjustment Law—a record 129-article bill including a 2.8% average salary increase for public servants at US$1.7 billion cost—debate intensified in Congress. On Wednesday, 36 articles advanced, per Labor Minister Giorgio Boccardo, who justified the bill's broad scope covering budget commitments, recent law clarifications, and state efficiency improvements like Correos de Chile and Enap operations (needing qualified quorum), contract worker modifications, conditions for employees over 75, and accelerated Local Education Services timelines.

Boccardo emphasized the executive's tradition of bundling reforms via this expedited law, rejecting claims it complicates dismissals for the 300,000 contract workers among 500,000 central state employees. "Dismissals should be justified to reduce judicial uncertainty," he said, while calling for public employment modernization and defending civil servants' essential roles in health, education, and IPS against 'systematic denigration.'

Opposition and outlets like La Tercera criticize the 100+ 'add-ons' as tying the next administration's hands, demanding deeper debate on complex issues and clear financing—especially after initial budget assumptions of zero readjustment. The government anticipates approving most of the bill soon, focusing debate on key contentious points.

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Dramatic illustration of Chamber of Deputies approving public sector 3.4% salary bill, rejecting tie-down norms, and dispatching to Senate amid opposition funding concerns.
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Chamber dispatches public sector salary adjustment to Senate rejecting tie-down norms

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The Chamber of Deputies approved and dispatched the public sector readjustment bill to the Senate, including a gradual 3.4% salary increase. However, it rejected the controversial 'tie-down norms' pushed by the government, which plans to reintroduce them in the Upper House. Opposition lawmakers criticized the lack of clear funding for part of the fiscal cost.

Finance Minister Nicolás Grau submitted to Congress a public sector adjustment bill that sets a record with 129 articles, including a controversial tying norm and various miscellaneous initiatives. The proposal draws opposition criticism for its length, lack of funding, and measures that could bind the incoming government. The estimated fiscal cost for 2026 is US$1.775 million.

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The Senate's Finance Committee started reviewing the public sector readjustment bill, presented by Finance Minister Nicolás Grau. Deputies approved a 3.4% gradual salary increase but rejected the 'tie-breaker norm' aimed at greater job stability. Opposition anticipates rejecting that provision again in the Senate.

In a pivotal update amid union opposition and provincial tensions, the Argentine government announced the removal of the controversial Ganancias (income tax) chapter from its labor reform bill ahead of Wednesday's Senate debate. Patricia Bullrich presented the final version, agreed with allied blocs, to facilitate approval and half-sanction.

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The Chamber of Deputies began debating the labor reform on Thursday, February 19, 2026, achieving quorum with 130 lawmakers thanks to support from allied and provincial blocs. The ruling party defends updating 50-year-old regulations, while the opposition criticizes the loss of rights and questions the rushed process. Outside the chamber, protesters rallied against the bill, leading to clashes with police.

Mexico's Chamber of Deputies advanced the reform to reduce the workweek from 48 to 40 hours, approved unanimously in united committees. The measure will be implemented gradually until 2030, without salary cuts. While it does not include two rest days, it garners bipartisan support amid debates on further adjustments.

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Chile's Finance Ministry has summoned opposition advisors for a Monday virtual meeting to explain the public sector adjustment bill's controversial 'tying' clause, following initial backlash from president-elect José Antonio Kast's team. The session aims to smooth congressional processing from January 5, while the presidential office orders political appointees to take pending vacations before March's government handover.

 

 

 

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