The French government will unveil details of a pension reform plan on Wednesday that has already seen workers down tools in anticipation, crippling transport for a week as hundreds of thousands took to the streets in protest.
A speedy resolution appears unlikely, with Prime Minister Edouard Philippe warning on Tuesday – the sixth day of an open-ended transport strike – of a lengthy battle ahead as unions vowed not to yield.
The industrial action has paralysed public transport in Paris and disrupted national rail services and grounded many planes.
It is the biggest show of union force since President Emmanuel Macron came to power in 2017 vowing to cut public spending and make the economy more competitive.
On Tuesday, 339,000 people took part in the second day of demonstrations over government plans to merge the country’s 42 pension schemes into one, the interior ministry estimated.
The numbers, which unions claimed were far greater, were markedly down from the first day of the strike on December 5, when more than 800,000 people took to the streets.
Philippe is scheduled to announce the eagerly awaited details of the pensions overhaul at noon (1100 GMT).
Some suggestions are already in the public domain.
Jean-Paul Delevoye, whom Macron entrusted with leading the reform project, angered unions by suggesting scrapping the more advantageous pension provisions enjoyed by some professions – including public transport and utility workers, sailors, notaries, and Paris Opera performers.
The government says the overhaul will make the retirement system fairer.
On Tuesday, the premier cautioned there would be “no magic announcements” to bring the protests to a sudden halt.
But he sought to reassure workers in sectors which enjoy earlier retirement or more generous pensions that the changes would be gradual.
Those opposing the reform accuse former investment banker Macron of trying to roll back France’s costly but highly cherished welfare state.
The official retirement age in France is 62 – one of the lowest among developed countries and fiercely defended by the labour force.
France’s famously militant unions have sounded an uncompromising note, insisting they will not call off the strike unless the reform is scrapped outright.
The action has revived memories of three-week-long strikes over pension reform that crippled France in 1995, forcing the centre-right government of the day to reverse course.
Teachers joined the industrial action on Tuesday for the second time in a week, closing many schools.
Julien Sergere, a 38-year-old teacher who marched in Paris, told AFP he was worried that a proposal to standardise the way pensions are calculated would leave teachers poorer.
“Our wages are low and until now the advantage we had was that our pensions were calculated on the basis of the last six months of our career, which compensated a bit.
“But today, they’re talking about [basing calculations on] the last 25 years, which could make our pensions fall by between $550 and 1,100 per month on average,” he said.