【The China Post 每日精選】:一

In the video, the inefficiencies of the public policy process are assessed from day one, when isolated groups formulate policy based on their own internal discussions. By the time the policy has been finalized and outsiders, including the media, find out about its deficiencies, the group is forced to push through an alternative that is still unconvincing. The short clip ends by asking: "Everybody sees the problem with this: what can be done to save the government?"

But Lin and like-minded members of the bureaucracy face an uphill task in mobilizing support among both colleagues and the public.

Whereas older civil servants and retirees rally easily to the call of resisting cuts to their benefits, for many young people, the pension issue seems like a distant problem full of obtrusive technical terms and legalese.

Chou Hsin (周鑫), a civil servant in Chiayi City, said he only jumped on the issue when he saw the government's own actuary reports predicting that the whole public sector pension system would be bankrupt in 2031.

"I'm 32 now and will be 45 or 46 when the pension funds are predicted to run dry. Right now, NT$3,000 is being deducted from my salary every month to pay into the pension fund. Unless something changes I basically won't be seeing any of the money I'm putting in right now," he said during a telephone interview.

Galvanized by Lin's open letter to the Tsai administration, Chou later became the organizations' spokesman for government-held discussion panels on pension reform.

Finding Middle Ground

The challenge for those advocating reform has been building a consensus among civil servants

"For me, it's understandable that older colleagues who are about to retire want to take a position of resisting the government's reforms," Chou said.

And even among groups supporting reform positions were diverse. Chou emphasized repeatedly during our conversation that TCSIC could not possibly represent all of its members.

A main area of contention has been the pace of which reforms are to take place. For example, Lin fears that the gradual pace proposed by the government may not translate into a sustainable system, describing it as a temporary solution at best.

"Other young civil servants wanted a more radical approach: a clear division along generational lines to pursue reform objectives. But our viewpoint is different: a country's pension system is built on generations paying into it to support the next — so when we hear these opinions we have to take them into account and make adjustments accordingly," he said.

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