French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe offered a major concession to unions after trade groups took to the streets for a fifth straight day of protests against President Emmanuel Macron's overhaul of the pension system.

The prime minister said in a letter to unions and employers that he was ready to make an offer to unions, on the basis of a compromise, after talks on Friday.

Watch video 01:33 Share Major strike cripples France Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/3UGUK Millions strike over Macron's pension reforms

He said he was ready to withdraw his proposal to raise the retirement for full pension benefits by two years to 64, under certain conditions. The new, extended retirement age would have been been implemented from 2027.

Read more: Emmanuel Macron goes ahead with pension reforms amid strikes

"To demonstrate my confidence in the social partners ... I am willing to withdraw from the bill the short-term measure I had proposed."

He delivered the message as thousands of protesters flooded the streets of Paris and other major cities in France. The trade unions and their allies have called on the government to withdraw its plans to raise the standard retirement age, using mass protests that have blocked rail traffic and curbed access to public transportation since December 5.

Read more:France transport strikes paralyze weekend travel

Through the concession, Philippe is looking quell the ongoing demonstrations and improve ties with moderate trade unions, such as France's Democratic Confederation of Labour (CFDT).

Watch video 01:21 Share Chaos in France as strike continues Send Facebook google+ Whatsapp Tumblr linkedin stumble Digg reddit Newsvine Permalink https://p.dw.com/p/3UwKG Chaos in France as strike continues

The proposed boost to the retirement age is part of the government's efforts to fuse 42 existing pension schemes into a single, points-based system that trade unions fear will make citizens work for more years, only to receive a smaller pension.

France has said that the proposed "pivot age" would curb rising pension deficits, and save 11 billion euros (US$12.2 billion) by 2026.

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lc/es (AFP, Reuters, dpa)