Taxi drivers start procedures to advance their retirement

The National Taxi Association (Antaxi) has signed an agreement with CEOE and ATA to request coefficients allowing earlier retirement without pension cuts. It is preparing a similar deal with CC OO and UGT for salaried drivers. The measure aims to recognize the arduous nature of the job and could benefit around 100,000 families.

The latest pension reform allows sectors with particularly arduous jobs to request coefficients reducing the retirement age without pension cuts, in exchange for higher contributions. Employers' and unions' agreement is required. In this context, Antaxi signed an agreement on Monday with employers' group CEOE and self-employed association ATA to start procedures for license-owning taxi drivers who contribute as self-employed, as reported by EL PAÍS. Antaxi president Julio Sanz García stated that the deal with unions CC OO and UGT —included in the sector's ninth collective agreement— will be formalized in coming days, also covering salaried drivers. Once both agreements are signed, they will submit a formal request to the General Directorate of Social Security Order, including reports on sick leave, accident rates, and other indicators of job hazards. The Social Security has six months to assess the documents; if negative or no response (negative administrative silence), they cannot reapply for four years. Antaxi estimates the measure would benefit nearly 100,000 families: about 70,000 self-employed and 20,000 salaried employees. This pathway already applies to sectors like mining, maritime professions, flight crew, police, firefighters, and forest firefighters. The set coefficient determines early years —for example, 0.20 per contributed year multiplied by years worked, without going below 52 except in rare cases—. Self-employed taxi drivers would bear the full contribution increase. Other sectors like transport and construction have also started similar procedures.

Related Articles

Spanish government and unions sign deal for 11% public sector pay rise until 2028.
Image generated by AI

Government and unions agree on 11% salary increase for public employees until 2028

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

The Spanish government and unions UGT and CSIF have reached an agreement to raise salaries for 3.5 million public employees by 11% from 2025 to 2028. This increase, including a variable component tied to inflation, aims to recover lost purchasing power. CCOO has not yet signed but is expected to decide soon.

The Unión Tranviarios del Automotor (UTA) Chaco announced a bus strike in Greater Resistencia starting this Thursday at 00:00, due to the failure to fully pay salaries in metropolitan area companies. The union's general secretary, Raúl Abraham, confirmed the action amid ongoing debts covering about 50% of wages. The dispute affects both urban and interurban services in a region facing structural vulnerabilities in transportation.

Reported by AI

Iberia and most of its unions have reached an agreement for a voluntary employment regulation file (ERE) affecting 996 employees, according to union and company sources. The deal includes early retirements at 80% of regulatory salary and incentivized redundancies of 35 days per year worked. It affects about 9.4% of the 10,700-strong workforce.

The ATEPSA union suspended the planned strike for this week at Argentine airports after talks with EANA. The Ministry of Capital Humano confirmed the opening of dialogue to resolve the salary dispute. Air operations normalized immediately, avoiding cancellations.

Reported by AI

The union ver.di and the Municipal Employers' Association have reached an agreement on a new framework tariff contract for employees of municipal bus companies in Schleswig-Holstein. The deal includes improvements such as a higher annual bonus payment and a new substitute premium. No further strikes are threatened at present.

The Association of State Workers (ATE) confirmed a national strike for Tuesday in rejection of the labor reform pushed by Javier Milei's government. The action includes a march to Congress at 11 a.m. and criticizes potential cuts in public employment. The administration announced it will deduct the day from participating state employees.

Reported by AI

The South African National Taxi Council has praised the suspension of three taxi operators accused of assaulting a motorist in Vanderbijlpark. The incident, captured on a cellphone video, involved operators from the Civic Centre Taxi Association who suspected the driver of illegally transporting passengers. Police are investigating the case of common assault reported on January 12.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline