Personal training account: the government will not charge employees in 2024, announces Dussopt

2023-09-21 13:33:35

If this “track” remains under study for a later date, it will not be put in place for next year. The government will not introduce financial participation for employees in 2024 when they use their personal training account (CPF), Minister of Labor Olivier Dussopt indicated this Thursday.

The introduction of a “moderatory fee” for the use of the CPF is “an avenue under study”: it does not appear in the draft state budget for 2024, but “we continue to (it) work,” said Olivier Dussopt on Sud-Radio. Last May, the Minister of the Economy Bruno Le Maire raised the possibility of introducing a remainder charge of around 30% for the CPF “except when the employer pays or you are in a difficult situation, for example example if you are unemployed”.

Public spending slightly down

Olivier Dussopt qualified these comments: “30% is not the amount that is planned, it is not fixed,” he said, adding that “it can be less (…) It depends on the amount of training”. The Minister of Labor adds that the remainder could be imposed “when the chosen training has no link with the job one holds” or “not necessarily a link with a professional project”.

According to the minister, public spending linked to the CPF will be slightly reduced in 2023, dropping to 4 billion euros, compared to 4.2 billion in 2022, thanks to “measures to hunt down fraudsters”, better security of the connection accounts, as well as the elimination of “training which was not qualifying, not serious”.

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