There’s a particular image that stays with you after following France’s pension reform story across several years — rubbish piling up along the Seine, the smell of smoke near Place d’Italie, and that low hum of controlled anger that French streets do better than almost anywhere else. The demonstrations against Emmanuel Macron’s proposal to increase the retirement age from 62 to 64 were not unplanned outbursts. They were organized, sustained, and — depending on how you look at it — remarkably effective. But effectiveness in the streets often comes with a price tag nobody tallies publicly.
The economic cost of the pension strikes in France has never been fully acknowledged. The disruption was widespread when hundreds of thousands of workers went on strike in December 2019 and again in early 2023. At one point, seven of France’s eight oil refineries were blocked. The Eiffel Tower was shut down. The Musée d’Orsay closed. Rail systems came to a standstill. It was a hassle for visitors. It was more of a quiet catastrophe for small businesses close to Paris’s main attractions.
Since the tourism aspect is rarely discussed in conjunction with the larger fiscal discussion, it is worthwhile to take a moment to consider it. In addition to being the nation’s capital, Paris serves as a kind of economic engine that the rest of France silently relies on. The losses are not confined to a single day when trains stop operating and major sites go dark. Reservations are canceled. Visitors take a different route. For weeks afterward, hotels and restaurants suffer the consequences. None of this appears in the dramatic footage of tear gas near the Champs-Élysées, but it’s real money leaving the system.

The episode from 2023 carried a unique burden. Macron’s choice to use a constitutional mechanism that circumvented debate in order to push the pension reform through without a full parliamentary vote infuriated an already skeptical public. The protests became more intense. Conflicts increased. Additionally, employees at power plants, refineries, and transit networks joined in, causing layered disruptions that exacerbated one another. Bruno Le Maire, the minister of finance, stated that the reform would still be carried out. Technically, he was correct. But the cost of that implementation, in lost output and political capital, is still being counted.
The fact that the OECD is correct is what truly complicates the situation. France’s fiscal position is, by most honest readings, stretched. The public debt is approaching 119% of output, the deficit is close to 5% of GDP, and the growth forecast for 2026 is only 0.7%. These are not made-up figures intended to put pressure on a populace. They are a reflection of a long-standing structural issue that France has been ignoring. Healthcare and pension expenses continue to rise. The cost of borrowing is increasing. The math is uncomfortable regardless of where you stand politically.
However, the purely fiscal argument overlooks something. The workers of France are not just acting irrationally. There are 42 distinct pension plans in the nation because different occupations have varying physical demands, varying career paths, and varying historical agreements. It is not the same calculation to ask an office administrator to retire later than it is to ask a railroad worker or a nurse. The bluntness of a universal system — however logical on a spreadsheet — tends to flatten those distinctions in ways that feel, to the people affected, like erasure.
With a presidential election scheduled for April 2027, the question of whether any French government has the political will to genuinely close this gap is currently in the background. The reform that provoked years of demonstrations has been shelved. The OECD wants it restarted and ultimately linked to life expectancy — a suggestion that, in France, lands roughly like a lit match near dry paper. There’s a sense that everyone in the political class understands the fiscal reality and is quietly hoping someone else will be holding the pen when the hard decisions get made.
That reluctance is, in its own way, also an economic cost. The debt load increases with each month of delay. The final adjustment becomes steeper with each postponed reform. The blows were audible and obvious. This portion is quieter and slower, and it might have greater long-term effects.

