Civil servants' pensions increasingly burden the French state

In France, demographic imbalances in the public sector force the state to heavily fund pensions for former civil servants. With nearly 6 million public workers, or one in five employees, the number of active agents falls short of retirees, requiring significant over-contributions.

France's public sector employs about 6 million agents, accounting for one in five workers nationwide. Although the public sector's share of total employment is declining, the absolute number of civil servants continues to rise. Yet, the sector grapples with a stark demographic imbalance: just one active civil servant contributes for each retiree, compared to a national ratio of roughly 1.8 workers per retiree.

To address this, the state must supplement the special pension allocation account (CAS) with several billion euros annually. This funding ensures pension payments for former civil servants despite inadequate contributions from current staff. As of January 1, 2026, the employer public contribution rate is set by decree at 82.28%, highlighting the growing financial strain on the state.

This situation underscores the structural challenges in the public sector, encompassing diverse roles such as teachers, police officers, sanitation workers, and midwives. Sources note that this over-contribution is vital for sustaining payments but intensifies budgetary pressures on public finances.

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