Hindustan Times (Patiala)

PFRDA to pay agents more in pension subscripti­on drive

- Gireesh Chandra Prasad gireesh.p@livemint.com

NEWDELHI: Financial institutio­ns and post office branches will soon get paid better for enrolling people for pension schemes as the Pension Fund Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority (PFRDA) is set for an aggressive expansion of subscriber base to counter the socioecono­mic challenges of an ageing population.

The regulator wants pension coverage to go up significan­tly over the next four-five years as only about six to seven crore people, a small fraction of the country’s 50 crore working population, are covered by any form of formal pension system, PFRDA chairman Hemant Contractor told Mint in an interview.

The urgency to get more working people to sign up for retirement benefit schemes arises from the trend of elderly population growing at twice the pace of the general population in the last decade, pointing to serious socio-economic challenges to the government in future including the need for stepping up health spending.

PFRDA chairman said the regulator at present pays agencies that enroll people for pension schemes ₹120 for every new account in addition to ₹20 for every transactio­n by the subscriber. “It is a matter of debate if what we pay is enough or not. They always feel it is not enough. We are taking a relook at the incentive structure to make it a bit more attractive,” said Contractor. He declined to specify the quantum of increase the regulator will finalise after discussion­s.

“Our pension penetratio­n is very poor (about 14% of the working population) because of the fact that the informal sector accounts for a large part of the labour market. The challenge is to reach out to them.”

“NPS (National Pension System) is a low cost post-retirement benefit scheme with very attractive returns but awareness about the scheme is low. It is a good idea to give further fiscal incentives to the subscriber­s and also encourage banks and other institutio­ns to enroll more people into NPS as they have a large customer base,” said Gopal Kumar, actuary and economist at actuarial consulting firm Radgo & Company.

According to a 2016 report by the Central Statistics Office (CSO), the elderly population of 60 years or more expanded at the rate of 35.5% in the 2001-2011 period, while the growth rate in the general population was slower by half at 17.7%. The report pointed out that 8.6% of the total population of 121 crore — 10.4 crore people were at 60 years or above. Slightly less than three fourth of them live in rural areas, where pension coverage is also poor. At the age of 60, the average remaining length of life is 17 years, the report said citing the 2011 population census.

The population of elderly citizens is forecast to reach about 18 crore by 2026, the PFRDA chairman said.

“With so many old people and low pension coverage, we could be faced with a problem. That is why we have been asking banks to step up enrollment so that these people do not face any hardship in their old age. Fifteen years ago, average life span of the population was 62.5 years. Now it is 68 years,” he said.

NPS, introduced in 2004 by PFRDA for government employees and opened to every citizen in 2009, now has a corpus of ₹2 lakh crore with a subscriber base of close to 1.6 crore people. The subscriber base includes central and state government employees and members from private sector enterprise­s including the informal sector.

 ?? MINT/FILE ?? PFRDA chairman Hemant Contractor
MINT/FILE PFRDA chairman Hemant Contractor

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