Contraloría detects regulatory gaps in Supersubsidio's precautionary measures

Colombia's Comptroller General revealed regulatory gaps and weaknesses in precautionary measures imposed by the Family Subsidy Superintendency (Supersubsidio) on Family Compensation Funds (CCF). The study reviewed 24 interventions from 2019 to 2023, finding most unsatisfactory. It influenced a Constitutional Court ruling mandating a new regime by 2027.

Colombia's Comptroller General, through its Delegate for the Labor Sector, presented a sectoral study on precautionary measures imposed by the Family Subsidy Superintendency (Supersubsidio) on Family Compensation Funds (CCF). The review covered 24 measures from 2019 to 2023: nine (38%) were satisfactory, thirteen (54%) were not, and two (8%) were atypical cases that could not be rated.

Identified issues include financial troubles in CCFs, especially in health programs, along with legal, administrative, and corporate governance weaknesses. The Comptroller noted that these measures lack a time limit, with some extending over multiple terms. Moreover, current regulations fail to define causes, criteria, procedures, or timelines, leading to inequitable practices and discretion.

Currently, out of 42 CCFs, 13 are under precautionary measures: two in special surveillance, two in partial administrative intervention, and nine in full administrative intervention.

The study informed the Constitutional Court's Ruling C-298 of July 3, 2025, which declared deferred unconstitutionality of the existing regime. The Court directed Congress to enact a new precautionary and sanctioning framework for the Family Subsidy System by June 21, 2027, ensuring transparency, effectiveness, and equity.

The Comptroller continues monitoring and is conducting a new study in the first half of 2026 to assess the ruling's impact on Supersubsidio's practices.

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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.

Chile's Comptroller General (CGR) found the Tarapacá Health Service failed to collect over $12 billion for 17,390 staff medical leaves from January 2023 to March 2025. It ordered immediate collection processes and a disciplinary procedure. The audit exposed serious management and internal control failures.

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Colombia's Superintendencia Nacional de Salud, led by Daniel Quintero, has launched a special inspection and oversight action on the teachers' health model managed by Fomag. The move follows a request from President Gustavo Petro to examine potential irregularities in its operations and resource use. The review will cover administration, contracting, and financial flows.

The State Council suspended the transfer of 5 trillion pesos from pension fund administrators to Colpensiones. The government expressed deep concern over the impact on pension payments. President Gustavo Petro criticized the decision and announced legal action.

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Colombia's Procuraduría General de la Nación has provisionally suspended Asmet Salud EPS's special interventor, Lain Eduardo López Martínez, for three months over alleged deterioration in health services. The move also launches probes into former interventors. It follows preventive visits uncovering rises in complaints and financial issues.

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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