Daily Trust

Why every worker needs to get a pension plan!

- By Simon Echewofun Sunday

Pension plans are used by employees to accumulate tax-sheltered savings in order to receive income during retirement. The money is usually invested in various vehicles such as mutual funds including stocks and bonds of local and foreign companies from which interests are yielded and added to the mutual savings of the employees.

In the past, the contributi­on to pension plans was done mostly by public firms with many private firms paying little or no attention to that. However, a policy shift in the millennium has improved what people knew as pension earlier.

The National Pension Act that establishe­s the National Pension Commission (PenCom) now mandates all employers both private and public firms to ensure their employees are compulsori­ly enrolled in a pension plan.

The emphasis also gave rise to many intermedia­ries called the Pension Fund Administra­tors (PFAs) that serves as pensioners’ bank just the way commercial banks operate.

In the past years, surveys have shown that many employers contribute to their employees’ pension plan, which strongly encourages the enrolment figure.

Several types of plans can be offered by employers. An assessment of each employer’s needs is required to determine which type of plan is the most appropriat­e. Workers are encouraged to key into the redefined pension scheme so they can

Question:

have a fund for retirement.

The Daily Trust reports some benefits of having a pension plan. For someone who puts in at least 35 years of work experience, retirement should be a time to have some income flow from the Retirement Savings Account (RSA). A robust RSA guarantees a retiree rest and not a period for seeking for odd jobs to make ends meet or become dependent on their children.

You need a pension plan to maintain the same standard of living after retirement:

Your pension plan will nicely complement earning needs in the future. Pension helps to provide retirement income to enable you have fund for your itinerarie­s when you retire.

A fringe benefit from your employer: Pension in Nigeria is a contributo­ry scheme. Your employer contribute­s a part while you contribute the other part. According to the 2014 Pension Reform Act, employers contribute 10 per cent while employees contribute eight per cent of the monthly salary as pension. This has been made mandatory by PenCom and all employers ought to key into it. Besides the financial security it offers after retirement, it is a form of deferred pay appreciate­d by employees. For the employer, having a plan can make it easier to attract and keep competent employees.

Investment, a cushion against job loss

The PenCom has said one can withdraw up to 25 per cent of the pension fund if he or she remains unemployed for four months after losing the previous job. In this period

Can I withdraw funds from my pension plan through the Retirement Savings Account (RSA) when am not yet retired, just like the normal savings account? - Anonymous

Members cannot withdraw funds because they are locked-in in order to provide a retirement income. If the fund is withdrawn, it will deplete and there will be little to nothing when its most needed - at retirement. However, if you are out of employment for about four months and are unable to secure another employment. You can request for 25 per cent of your RSA balance. After this 25 per cent has been withdrawn for your RSA, the balance cannot be touched until retirement. - PenCom

Answer: Question:

If my employer goes bankrupt, can the pension fund for the staff be used to pay the creditors? Uche, Abuja. No. The pension fund is not part of the employer’s

Answer:

of recession, many had lost their jobs but consider if they had a pension plan that had lasted for four to five years. They could easily get from N200,000 and above from their PFAs as seed money to start up a turnkey business. If they are diligent enough, they could get yields from the capital and become self-employed in no time.

Encourages saving culture

The pension scheme has a plan tagged the Additional Voluntary Contributi­ons (AVC). It encourages you to save more through your RSA. The Pension Act says you are entitled to withdraw from your AVC any time before retirement. It is also tax-free if withdrawal is after five years. So if one has been putting some AVC in your retirement account or if you start now, you too can withdraw from that at any point before you retire.

As retirement nears…

When it’s closer to retirement, the process of documentat­ion begins, actually from six months before you retire. For civil servants, they have to go for the Bond verificati­on exercise organised by PenCom. The exercise is to enable PenCom to consolidat­e their account and ensure their accrued rights are paid immediatel­y once they retire.

For private sector employees, your PFA has to confirm that all contributi­ons due to you have been made. This process is called ‘consolidat­ion of account’. After this is done, the process of actual payment should take about three weeks. assets. It cannot be used to pay the creditors of the bankrupt employer. If a business goes bankrupt, the pension plan is normally terminated and the pension fund contributi­on from the employer is stopped. - PenCom

Can I make additional contributi­on to pension account. What are the modalities for this? - Simon, Nasarawa state

Question: Answer:

Voluntary Contributi­ons (VC) are additional contributi­ons that can be made alongside your mandatory contributi­ons to your Retirement Savings Account (RSA). Remittance of voluntary contributi­ons must come through your employer. The payment schedule provided to your employer, has a column for VC: this column should be filled with the amount you choose to contribute as VC. - StanbicIBT­C Pension.

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