Realistic depiction of Colombia's informal labor market precarity, with worried workers and pension shortfall graph.
Realistic depiction of Colombia's informal labor market precarity, with worried workers and pension shortfall graph.
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Anif warns of intermittent formality impacts in Colombia

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Anif has warned about the consequences of 'intermittent formality' in Colombia's labor market, affecting the accumulation of quoted weeks and social protection. According to Asofondos, only one in four workers accesses a pension due to persistent informality. This leads to employment precarization and challenges for the retirement of millions of Colombians.

Colombia's labor market shows improvements, with informality reduced to 55.1% this year and unemployment at 8.2% in September, according to Anif. However, the entity highlights that formality has a 'temporary face', with active contributors decreasing and inactive ones increasing. Until May 2024, the difference between active and inactive affiliates was narrowing, but in June inactives surpassed actives by 779,000 people. By August 2025, 47% are active and 53% inactive, with a gap of 1.2 million.

This intermittency implies frequent disaffiliations, reducing quoted weeks for pensions and weakening protection in old age. Anif notes that 'frequent rotation may reflect precarization of formal employment, where short-term contracts without contributions become the norm, eroding traditional stability'.

Meanwhile, Asofondos estimates that only 25% of workers achieve a pension, while 75% spend more than a third of their working life in informality or unemployment. Women have contributed less than 23% of the time (for example, a 30-year-old woman has contributed 1.8 years instead of 8), and men less than 27% (2.2 years). 'Informality is a current and future problem, a time bomb for the old age of millions of Colombians', said Andrés Velasco, president of Asofondos. Addressing this 'labor gap' could increase pensions by 50% to 70%.

Proposals include promoting formalization, productivity, and quality employment to mitigate these effects.

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Recent X discussions, primarily from ANIF and journalists, echo warnings about 'intermittent formality' in Colombia's labor market, where formal jobs lack stability, hindering pension accumulation and social protection. Opinions stress the labor market as the root issue for low pension coverage amid persistent informality.

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Dramatic courtroom scene illustrating Colombia's State Council suspending $25 trillion pension fund transfer to Colpensiones, with symbolic money halt and concerned savers.
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State Council suspends partial transfer of $25 trillion to Colpensiones

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Colombia's State Council suspended Chapter 5 of Decree 415 of 2026, ordering AFP to transfer $25 trillion immediately to Colpensiones. The precautionary measure affects savings of those who switched regimes but have not yet met pension requirements. Asofondos requested extending the suspension to the remaining $5 trillion.

Grupo Cibest warned of high labor informality and vulnerable self-employment in Colombia, despite job creation recovery. Dane data showed an unemployment rate of 8.8% in March. The report highlights challenges including 55.6% informality and wage growth without productivity gains.

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Asocajas held its Gran Foro de Protección Social on April 8, where experts discussed Colombia's high labor informality and the need for macroeconomic solutions. David Escobar Arango, president of Asocajas' Board, opened the event noting that formal employment is stagnant despite falling unemployment. Panelists including José Ignacio López of Anif, María Claudia Lacouture of Aliadas, and César Giraldo of Banco de la República addressed minimum wage and inflation.

Asofondos reiterated that the transfer of pension resources must comply with current law. The association requested a definitive ruling from the Constitutional Court on Law 2381 of 2024 to provide legal certainty. It warned that an early transfer to Colpensiones violates existing regulations.

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Pedro Nel Ospina, in an analysis published in La República, argues that Colombia needs laws better connected to reality to reduce informality. He proposes integrating people and businesses outside the formal system through more flexible rules on taxes, labor, and procedures. His legislative agenda focuses on three pillars to promote inclusive growth.

Colombia has seen a sharp drop in the manufacturing industry's share of its GDP, from 16% in 2005 to 9.9% in 2025. This structural decline is accompanied by relative growth in the agricultural sector, signaling reprimarization. Neighboring countries like Mexico and Brazil have maintained more stable industrial bases.

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Think tank Anif warned that the net debt of Colombia's National Central Government could exceed 71% of GDP in three years, a threshold incompatible with the fiscal rule. It identified public spending rigidity as Colombia's core fiscal issue. Current levels near 58% of GDP recall 19th-century crises.

 

 

 

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