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PENSIONS

Everything you need to know about Norway’s latest pension reform

The retirement age in Norway will increase in line with rising life expectancy, the country's parliament decided Thursday. A number of other changes will also be implemented, here's how they affect you.

Pictured is one the famous lion statues outside Norway's parliament.
A majority in Norway's parliament has voted in favour of a pension reform. Pictured is one the famous lion statues outside Norway's parliament. Photo: Ekely Getty Images

Seven of Norway’s nine mainstream political parties have reached a parliamentary majority on pension reform in the Nordic country. 

The country’s retirement age will increase alongside projected life expectancy under the new system. 

The governing Labour Party (Ap) and Centre Party (Sp) were joined by the Conservative Party (H), Liberal (V), Green Party (MDG), Socialist Left Party (SV), and the Christian Democratic Party (KrF), in voting in favour of the proposal. 

“I am happy about this historic and broad political agreement on a fairer pension system. The agreement illustrates that we can gather a solid majority around solutions that are good for people and that can stand the test of time,” Labour and Inclusion Minister Tonje Brenna said. 

The government’s plan is based on proposals put forward by a parliamentary committee in 2022. 

How will it work? 

The current retirement age in Norway is 67, but people can begin drawing their state pension from the month before they turn 62. 

Under the new rules, those born in 1972 will retire at 68 years, and the retirement age will rise by around one year per decade after that. Therefore, somebody born in the 1980s would have a retirement age of 69. 

The right to access welfare such as sickness and unemployment benefits will also apply to those with an increased retirement age. 

The lower limit will also be adjusted and increase with life expectancy. 

Using the same example of those born in 1972, the lower limit will be raised to 63, while those born around 1982 cannot draw a state pension until they are 64. 

Norway’s working ‘age limit’ will be increased too. Under current rules, employers can bring a working relationship to an end with no factual reason when they pass a certain age. 

Public sector workers will see this age limit increased from 70 to 72. The limit in the private sector is 72. 

The obligation to retire in certain occupations will also be removed to allow people to work longer. This obligation applies to professions with particularly demanding conditions, such as firefighters and health workers. 

“This is an important contribution to combating age discrimination in working life”, Henrik Asheim, deputy leader of the Conservative Party, said. 

There will also be increased tax deductions for those with private pension savings. 

The pension scheme will be reassessed every ten years as part of the agreement. 

Are there any exceptions?

Those forced to retire five years before the standard retirement age will receive a supplement via a hardship scheme. 

The aim of this scheme is to cover those who are unable to work as they grow older, or due to poor health. 

This will be 0.25 G. At current rates, this is around 30,000 kroner a year. G refers to the basic amount in Norway’s National Insurance Scheme. It is the amount which benefits and social security are set against. 

There will also be increased provisions for those with disabilities. 

What have people said about the proposals?

Seven of the main parties voted in favour of the proposals. However, the populist Progress Party (FrP) and far-left Red Party (R) were against the proposals. 

The Progress Party believed those with the lowest pension would be left behind. The Red Party broadly agreed with the other proposals but disagreed with the increased retirement age. 

The Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO) has called the agreement “Norwegian politics at its very best”. 

Its leader, Peggy Hessen Følsvik, said she was satisfied that the government secured a cross-party agreement on the hardship scheme. Before the proposals were put through parliament, the trade union umbrella lobbied the government to include such a scheme. 

Employer organisation, the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (NHO), said that it would now be essential to ensure that working environments allowed people to work for longer, but otherwise praised the government. 

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SCHOOLS

Norway’s government reverses cuts to private and international schools

Proposed cuts to around 150 private schools offering both primary and secondary school education have been reversed by Norway's government.

Norway’s government reverses cuts to private and international schools

The initial cuts were announced as part of the state budget for 2024 last autumn, and private schools told The Local that the cuts threatened their existence

Following backlash and protests last year, the government said it would tweak its plans, and on Tuesday, it announced the cuts would be reversed and a new subsidy scheme would be adopted. 

“We believe that the new model provides a better distribution between schools. Some schools were overcompensated, while other schools were undercompensated,” school policy spokesperson and MP for the Centre Party, Marit Knutsdatter Strand, told public broadcaster NRK

Independent schools in Norway will now receive 484 million kroner compared to the 515 million kroner the government planned to save by cutting subsidies. 

The announcement has been met with mixed reactions from some private schools. 

“We are happy that the government is correcting the cut from last autumn and that almost all the money is coming back. At the same time, this is money we thought we had and which was taken from us, so there is no violent cheering…” Helge Vatne, the acting general secretary of the Association of Christian Free Schools, told NRK. 

When the initial cuts were announced last year, the government said that it would no longer pay subsidies for both levels of education offered at private, independent, and international schools and that such institutions would instead receive only one grant. 

The extra subsidies have been paid out to compensate for the higher per-pupil running costs of private schools. 

In return, private schools must adopt certain parts of the Norwegian curriculum and cap fees. As a result, fees at schools that receive money from the government typically range between 24,500 kroner and 37,000 kroner a year.

However, not all schools accept government subsidies. These institutions, therefore, have more say over their curriculum and charge higher fees to compensate for the lack of government funding. 

READ MORE: Why some international schools in Norway are much more expensive than others

Some 30,000 children in Norway attend a private or international school, according to figures from the national data agency Statistics Norway

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