Peru court scraps law allowing withdrawals from state run pension system
Peru’s Constitutional Court on Thursday tossed out a law that would have allowed the partial withdraw of savings by citizens enrolled with state pension fund, a measure that had prompted fierce opposition from interim President Francisco Sagasti.
The court said in a statement that it had voted unanimously to overturn the law, calling it “unconstitutional.”
The law passed by opposition members of Congress in December, intended as a lifeline for those in need amid the coronavirus crisis, would have allowed members to draw up to 4,300 soles ($1,192) from the state-run system.
Most Peruvians prefer the larger, privately-run pension system, but many state-workers, and some in private business, opt instead for the state-run plan.
The bill’s passage came just weeks after lawmakers approved two similar withdrawals from the country´s parallel, privately-run system. Sagasti’s administration, however, had warned that tapping the state-run system would further decimate public coffers, already in dire straits as Peru, the world’s No.2 copper producer, struggles through one of its deepest recessions in decades.
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