For nine or more years, I have been deluding myself. I
discovered this month that I am not a self-employed writer – as I have been
telling people – but I am actually salaried. The trouble is, I don't know who
pays my pitiful salary. If I did, I could go on strike and/or get myself
dismissed and then sue my employer for wrongful dismissal, as per the popular
ruse among the French salaried fraternity.
I discovered this startling – and somewhat unsettling –
piece of information quite by chance. Having decided to take my official
retirement as from 1st November later this year, I went about the
daunting task of trying to find out how to do it. Needless to say, the French
retirement system is incredibly complicated and confusing: it's full of all
kinds of organisations with four or more capital letters that stand for confusion.
A lot of them begin with the letter C for Caisse,
meaning cashbox, till and savings bank.
That much I'd gleaned when I set out on my quest earlier last
week, armed with a demonstration of the new online portal by my friend Nick,
who plans to retire in August – two years before me, age-wise. I have dragged
my heels because a) my annual French retirement will amount to just over a
thousand euros, which will just about cover the annual taxe foncière on this house (a kind of tax on the land on which the
house is built, kind of), and b) because I get a debilitating case of the
heebie-jeebies every time I even think of the French administrative system, let
alone attempt to negotiate it.
Since 2009, I have been paying my dues to an organisation
called Agessa, which is based in Paris and linked to the Maison des Artistes.
Agessa handles writers in various guises and photographers, I believe. For many
years, I thought that they would eventually pay my retirement. But no. They
divert my dues to a C-organisation that will pay my basic pension. This is then
made up to a sum that depends on the number of points you've earned by a mutuel – or complementary retirement
organisation. Mine goes by the acronym IRCEC (with two Cs). It is sub-divided
into three sub-organisations according to what branch of the arts you come
under. Mine's something like RAAP, which certainly ought to but doesn't begin
with a C.
My mission, Jim, which I chose to accept only out of
sheer necessity, was to find out which organisation would pay my basic pension
so I could ask them if I could please retire on the 1st November. So
I set off on the new portal and managed to create une espace personnelle or personal space.
'You all right, dad?' my daughter asked every time she
ventured upstairs or passed by the bottom of the stairs and looked up to see me
sitting in front of the screen with my head in my hands.
'No, I'm going round and round in circles here. Getting
nowhere fast.'
'Oh dear. Can I help?'
'No. Thank you, love. I don't think anyone can help.'
'Oh dear. Can I help?'
'No. Thank you, love. I don't think anyone can help.'
Although, for example, I discovered that I had the right
to organise a face-to-face meeting with someone before 'launching my demand', every
time I tried, I received the mystifying message, Aucun lieu d'accueil trouvé pour cette recherche. Which means
roughly, No place of welcome found for
this search. Which means God-knows-what.
Close to self-immolation, I picked up the phone and
dialled a few telephone numbers uncovered by my dispiriting research. After
long waits, I spoke to two people whom you might at best describe as
matter-of-fact. They helped me not one jot. Which deepened the sense of
futility.
But as has been so often the case in this perplexing
country, at your darkest hour – just when you are ready to burst into tears or
drink hemlock – you stumble serendipitously on someone (whisper the words) nice
and helpful. I dialled a number I found on a suspiciously out-of-date website
for an organisation I'd never heard of. A woman picked up the phone on the
first ring. Perhaps detecting the note of hopelessness in my voice, she spent
25 minutes patiently and clearly demystifying the subject. She even directed me
to a pdf to download that explained it all (not very clearly) in diagrammatic
form. The problem I'd experienced was because I'd tried to venture down the Indépendant route. I should have been
selecting the tab for Salariés.
I went back to the portal and obtained my illustration of
the riches that awaited me. So now, I imagined, I could arrange my preparatory
interview on line. Only it still came up No
place of welcome for this search. Which gave me the faintest whiff of what
it must be like – every day – for a refugee.
Meanwhile, in her parallel world of clients and
consultations, the Good Wife is trying to obtain the status of accredited
trainer for the courses she also runs, principally so she won't have to pay her
crippling three-monthly TVA bills. This has brought her up close and impersonal
with a little known but singularly ghastly administrative quango based in the
good-for-nothing city of Poitiers. There they practise the functionary's ruse
of Keep it moving. In other words,
when another file lands on your desk, you find a way of passing it on to
someone else or going back for further information. I speak from experience,
although being cursed with a conscience, I lived by the credo during my 15-year
tenure that The buck stops here.
In trying to satisfy some specious request for further
details, my poor wife made the mistake of phoning the quango. Her usual
interlocutrice was absent and some even worse dragon launched into a diatribe
about the stress she was labouring under. Unable to get a word in edgewise, she
somehow managed to maintain the dignity and patience of a saint. Nevertheless,
she was effectively told that she really didn't have a chance in Hades, so it
wasn't worth pursuing her demand. She will, because she's determined not to be
cowed by unbelievers.
However, we're already discussing contingency plans. Some
lifelong trainer she knows of apparently refuses to pursue official
dispensation. Even if granted, it has to be renewed annually, thereby creating
more folders to move from in-tray to in-tray until one party cracks. The
trainer was told by his accountant that the only alternative to hoop-jumping
was to cheat. It's incredible the number of times we've heard words to the same
effect during 22+ years here. It leads you to believe that corruption must be
as endemic in France as it is in Italy and Greece.
Back in the DisUK, it all seems deceptively easier. Despite
all the headline-grabbing political mess and the winds of xenophobia unleashed
by the great Brexit deception, life in well-heeled middle-class Romsey potters
on at the kind of leisurely pace my father manages on his morning perambulations.
I led him around for a few days, deputising for my sisters while they took a
break from keeping the Ageing P in the style to which he has become accustomed
after the death of our ascetic mother. We dipped into charity shops and took
coffee and croissants at Luc's delicatessen and laughed about the knitted
bollards. The town was 'yarn-bombed' – to use the term my daughter revealed –
in aid of the local festival. Charities, clubs, associations and groups of
individuals created all kinds of crazy woollen bollard-cosies in aid of...
something. Perhaps simply our amusement.
I began my self-employed career back in my homeland. If
you want to call yourself a training consultant, as I did briefly, you call
yourself that. You then sink or swim according to your self-belief and the
amount of effort you're prepared to put in. I largely sank, which was one
reason for moving to France. In any case, being salaried is no big deal in this
day and age of short-term contracts and evaporating job security. A
self-employed person pays a modest amount of money into the National Insurance
and trusts that, when it's time to hang up the accounts, the government will
still be solvent enough to pay out a decent monthly pension. I have a few more
years yet to wait and see whether or not the promised Shangri-La will prove to
be pie in the sky.
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