Originally posted by Chrysalis
As I understand it, the state nationalised the pension fund of ex bank employees. Those now fall under the state retirement system.
From what I
have read, that's partially true (if I understood it right).
The state got the money for paying the pensions to the retired bank employees, so now that money enters the state's accounts. The banks do not have
to pay the pensions, but some sources say that the banks may lose up 2 thousand million Euros (or 2 billions, for those that use that naming
convention), because the banks now do not have that money available for what they wanted to do.
In the end, the state took a burden off the hands of the banks, said ex-employees will get less pension benefits.
No, the ex-employees
get exactly the same benefits they did if this change hadn't happened, this was the result of two months (I think it was, but I'm not sure)
discussions between the banks, the unions and the government, and as the government needed the money the unions didn't allow any benefit loss.
Also, this covers only the basic pension, any special pension plan is still is the hands of the banks.
But as all this is a little too confusing to me, I may be completely wrong.