The Brazilian Pension Funds Authority (PREVIC) participated in the launch of the 2026 Legislative Agenda for the complementary pension sector in Brazil’s Chamber of Deputies, endorsing a package of 16 legislative proposals and the creation of a Mixed Parliamentary Front focused on strengthening closed pension entities (EFPC). The agenda covers measures on taxation, micropensions, financial education and extraordinary contributions. PREVIC director-superintendent Ricardo Pena framed the initiative as part of consolidating the sector and pointed to supervision and risk management, referencing the Master bank scandal and stating that closed complementary pension funds had no exposure to it. He also indicated PREVIC’s support for the strengthening work and called for increased backing from companies and individuals for pension savings. The parliamentary front’s president, federal deputy Tadeu Veneri, said the goal is to clarify issues and move forward on proposals that have been pending for years, while Abrapp highlighted objectives including expanding access, reducing barriers, stimulating new plans and strengthening governance; Anapar welcomed the agenda but urged removal of proposals seen as regressive to participants’ rights. The Mixed Parliamentary Front intends to prioritise the legislative processing of the 16 proposals during 2026.
Brazilian Pension Funds Authority (PREVIC) 2026-03-10
Brazilian Pension Funds Authority supports 2026 legislative agenda and parliamentary front to prioritise 16 closed pension fund proposals
The Brazilian Pension Funds Authority (PREVIC) endorsed the 2026 Legislative Agenda for the complementary pension sector, supporting 16 legislative proposals and creating a Mixed Parliamentary Front to strengthen closed pension entities. The agenda addresses taxation, micropensions, financial education, and extraordinary contributions. PREVIC emphasized sector consolidation, supervision, and risk management, while stakeholders highlighted goals of expanding access and governance.