Turkish Pensioners Protest Insufficient Raises Amid Rising Living Costs
Recent pension adjustments in Turkey have sparked protests and intensified political criticism against President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's government. The administration announced pension increases of 17.7% for National Insurance Fund retirees and 13.5% for state employee pensioners for the second half of the year. However, pensioners' unions argue these raises, based on June inflation data, fail to keep pace with soaring living expenses such as electricity, natural gas, rent, transportation, food, and healthcare.
Organizers claim pensioners’ purchasing power has eroded so severely that many cannot afford basic needs or even small gifts for grandchildren. They attribute the problem not only to high inflation but also to policy choices that reduce social security’s share of national income, directing economic growth benefits to private capital rather than retirees. Various pensioner platforms, including the All Pensioners Union and the Revolutionary Pensioners Union, have increased activism across cities and provinces, demanding a minimum pension aligned with humane living standards, elimination of healthcare co-payments, and a larger social security budget.
The economic disparity fueling the protests is stark: while the minimum wage for state workers will rise from 61,890 to 70,251 Turkish lira (approximately 3,961 to 4,496 shekels), the minimum pension will increase only from 27,772 to 31,527 lira (about 1,777 to 2,018 shekels). By comparison, President Erdoğan’s monthly salary is expected to reach 354,497 lira (around 22,688 shekels). Political opposition has also weighed in, with İYİ Party leader Musavat Darvishoglu criticizing the inadequate raises and proposing legislation to set a minimum 40% increase for future pensions.
Pensioners’ organizers emphasize their demands are nonpartisan and vow to continue unified pressure for higher basic pensions and expanded social security benefits in Turkey.