Plan C advances to support young people and pensions

by times news cr

2024-08-06 07:01:38

With the votes in favor of the opposition, the Constitutional Points Commission of the Chamber of Deputies endorsed the reforms to the Constitution proposed by the Federal Executive in matters of support for young people and pensions, which are part of the Plan C.

On Thursday, lawmakers agreed to discuss only four of the nine initiatives they had originally decided to address.

The changes they discussed are those related to Article 123 constitutional in terms of support for young people; pension of retirement, salaries and housing for workers.

Regarding support for young people, a second paragraph was added so that the State provides monthly financial support equivalent to at least one current general minimum wage, to young people between 18 and 29 years of age who are unemployed and are not pursuing any level of education. formal education.

This, according to the approved document, so that they can be trained for work for a period of up to 12 months in businesses, companies, workshops, stores and other economic units.

The opinion was approved with only one reservation, proposed by Morena, in which they only changed the ages proposed remain set out in letters and not in numbers.

The ruling on retirement pensions, also approved on Thursday, establishes that every working person has the right to receive a fair pension.

With this, workers aged 65 who began contributing to the Mexican Social Security Institute from July 1, 1997 (IMSS) and those who are under the individual accounts regime that contribute to the Institute of Security and Social Services for State Workers (ISSSTE), will have the right to have their old-age retirement pension equal to your last salary up to an equivalent amount to the average salary registered in the IMSS.

Despite being approved unanimously, both the National Action Party legislators (PAN) and the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) criticized the way in which the government intends to finance these pensions.

Deputy Héctor Saúl Téllez stated that the financing of the Welfare Pension Fund will not be sufficient with what the Institute contributes to Return to the People what was Stolen.

He added that he also criticized the attempt to take over the trust funds of the Judiciary in order to have enough money for pensions.

“But these funds are controversial and will not be able to be used for a long time, but they continue to deceive the Mexican people by using resources that are not available,” said the PAN member.

For her part, Representative Laura Haro (PRI) commented that “the poisoned dart” in this reform is in the transitional provisions and the way in which they intend to finance the constitutional changes.

2024-08-06 07:01:38

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