Repatriation of pension savings sparks debate in Colombia

President Gustavo Petro pushes for repatriating about 250 trillion pesos invested abroad by pension funds, criticizing the economic model since the 1990s. The proposal has reignited debates with figures like Enrique Peñalosa and raised technical warnings from experts like Mónica Higuera. Petro argues that workers' savings should create local jobs rather than benefiting foreign economies.

The debate over repatriating pension savings in Colombia has intensified following a draft decree from the Ministry of Hacienda. President Gustavo Petro replied in a December 30 tweet to opposition from former Bogotá mayor Enrique Peñalosa, stating: “many countries want workers' savings from abroad to come to their country to create jobs, but the foolish Colombian official prefers to create jobs abroad rather than in his territory”.

Petro endorsed withdrawing funds from Colfuturo, a private entity, and stressed that repatriated savings will remain in funds if workers choose, preventing their export as capital. He criticized the model introduced by Law 100 under César Gaviria, which he says deviated from the Social State of Law and fueled current inequality. He also faulted Juan Manuel Santos' decree for allowing overseas investments without workers' consent and at risk, an error Petro intends to repeal.

Mónica Higuera, former URF director, backs the president's equity vision but cautions against hasty changes. “There must be technical economic and legal simulations, actuarial ones. [...] Bringing $125 trillion in 6 months would be fatal,” she warned. Petro concluded that pension payouts should not rely on unstable market interest rates but on national productivity, advocating for a fairer system.

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Colpensiones demands transfer of over 27 trillion pesos from private funds

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Colpensiones president Jaime Dussán demanded during the Council of Ministers the immediate transfer of more than 27 trillion pesos from private pension funds to the public entity for affiliates who switched to the public regime.

President Gustavo Petro sharply criticized the State Council's suspension of a $25 trillion AFP-to-Colpensiones transfer under Decree 415, now limited to about $5 trillion, accusing business leaders of theft if they withhold the funds. Asofondos pushes for full decree suspension amid ongoing legal battle.

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The Consejo Gremial stated that the transfer of $5 trillion from AFPs to Colpensiones within six days is unnecessary to cover pensions for those who switched via the opportunity window.

President Gustavo Petro presented on X several proposals to counter the effects of the Banco de la República's reference rate hike to 11.25%, which he called unconstitutional. Measures include subsidies for fertilizers, low-rate housing policies, and land distribution to peasants. He also called for self-regulation in fuel consumption amid the Middle East war.

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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.

After the Constitutional Court struck down the December 2025 emergency economic decree, the Colombian government will present a tax reform to raise $16 trillion. Finance Minister Germán Ávila and President Gustavo Petro confirmed the plan in response to the fiscal imbalance. The measure aims to avoid cuts to social spending and address inherited deficits.

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