Comments by "Peter Lund" (@peterfireflylund) on "TLDR News EU"
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@VFAHSN It's a bit dishonest to leave some important information out...
This is a very new rule, from Jan 2019. And not everybody has to wait until the age of 67. You could have mentioned Opzione Donna, APE Sociale, and Quota 100. You could also have mentioned the ability to retire (regardless of age) after roughly 42-43 years of social security payments.
You could also have provided some information on the average retirement age which is far from 67. Because of the existence of various early retirement schemes in many countries, the average retirement age is usually a bit lower than the official retirement age.
There are spreadsheets available here with average retirement age for OECD countries from 1970-2018:
https://www.oecd.org/els/emp/average-effective-age-of-retirement.htm
The current averages for Austria, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, The Netherlands: 63.5, 65.1, 64.3, 65.2, 66.4 (averages of 2013-18).
The current average for Italy: 62.4 (average of 2012-17), 63.3 (average of 2013-18).
I'd say the Frugal Four (+ Finland) have a point...
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