In her first interview of 2016, President Dilma Rousseff defended the pension reform by saying that "it is not possible to have an average retirement age of 55 in the country".
The President defended the adoption of mechanisms to raise the retirement age, a measure criticized by Rousseff's Workers' Party and social movements. "Let's face the pension reform," she said, highlighting that she will not change acquired rights and that a period of "transition" will be needed.
According to the President, the change can be made by fixing a minimum retirement age or by creating an instrument that mixes age with contribution period, as occurred with the "mobile formula 85/95", which sum points of age to the contribution period for women and men.
This may be the way [establish a minimum age]; the other is the 85/95 mobile formula approved in Congress," said Rousseff, answering on how the country's retirement age would be raised. She emphasized that the government will negotiate the reform with workers, businessmen and Congress.
Rousseff also insisted that the fiscal adjustment is her top priority for the economy. She will also seek to achieve a surplus of 0.5% of GDP and this will contribute to keep inflation below the goal of 6.5% this year.
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Folha De Sao Paulo