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In TCSIC's first press conference in January, many members wore surgical masks out of fear of being identified and targeted at work.

▲圖/翻攝自中國郵報

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

The Elephant in the Room

But flying under the media's radar has been a younger generation of civil servants, who not only want pension reforms to proceed, but also changes to the very definition of public service itself.

He said that following a recording of a televised debate on a political commentary show, Lee Lai-hsi (李來希), a prominent critic of pension reform, called him an idiot (Lin said he responded by calling Lee "very smart for having manipulated public opinion").

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.

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

"While they can't agree completely with our position翻譯社 when I explain our predicament of high contribution rates翻譯社 delayed retirement age and the looming threat of bankruptcy翻譯社 they can start to at least sympathize with our dilemma." Chou added that he was surprised when older superiors showed support and encouragement for the group's mission to institute changes from within.

Since the Democratic Progressive Party swept into power last May翻譯社 President Tsai Ing-wen has made reforming Taiwan's archaic pension system a government priority.

He said he found it surprising how the "relatively well-educated civil servant cohort does not have the good judgment to stand up to fake news or rumors."

Politicians in the past balked at diffusing the crisis, aware their policy choices could very well blow up in their face.

A main area of contention has been the pace of which reforms are to take place. For example翻譯社 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.

For him, it was a culture that was making the system unaccountable to the public, inefficient, unresponsive to social needs and at the mercy of political appointees. This desire by younger members of the civil service to reform from within gave way to the formation of the TCSIC.

Chou Hsin (周鑫), a civil servant in Chiayi City翻譯社 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.

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