Daily Trust

Concerns over minimum pension, transfer window delay

- By Francis Arinze Iloani

The pension industry has undergone rapid transforma­tion in slightly over a decade largely due to reforms that saw Nigeria offsetting billions of unpaid pension liabilitie­s and accumulati­ng N7.52 trillion under the contributo­ry pension scheme (CPS) as at the end of December, 2017.

The National Pension Commission (PenCom), currently headed in acting capacity by Aisha Dahir-Umar, had over the years regulated the contributo­ry pension scheme, growing membership to slightly less than eight million members.

Despite these achievemen­ts in the nation’s pension industry, there are key policy issues affecting pension and retirement in the country that are still in limbo.

One of such policy issues is the transfer window yet to be authorised by PenCom in the contributo­ry pension scheme in the country.

The Pension Reform Act, 2014 provides that an employee may, not more than once in a year, transfer the Retirement Savings Account (RSA) from one Pension Fund Administra­tor (PFA) to another without producing any reason for such transfer.

Section 13 of the Pension Reform Act 2014 also provides that, “subject to guidelines issued by the commission, a holder of a retirement savings account maintained under this Act may not, more than once in a year, transfer his account from one Pension Fund Administra­tor to another.”

Despite this provision, PenCom is yet to authorise PFAs to allow RSA holders to transfer their RSAs from one PFA to another.

The implicatio­n is that RSA holders whose PFAs are underperfo­rming in terms of investment of their savings are stucked with such PFAs as they cannot move their funds to PFAs with better history of high returns on investment.

When contacted, a source within PenCom explained that the Commission is being meticulous on the transfer window to ensure that contributo­rs are not affected.

The source said the Commission is cleaning up the database of RSA holders to ensure that issues such as duplicatio­ns and misinforma­tion are fixed to pave the way for RSA transfers.

Secondly, minimum pension guarantee is also in limbo as PenCom is yet to clearly define what retirees can earn as minimum pension just as there is minimum wage in the country.

Section 71 of the Pension Reform Act 2004 (now amended 2014) provided for the establishm­ent of a minimum pension guarantee for all workers who have contribute­d for some years but have not accumulate­d enough to have a minimum pension at retirement.

Section 71 of the Pension Reform Act

However, Daily Trust’s findings show that there is no defined minimum pension guaranteed at the moment under the CPS.

On minimum pension guarantee, the source said PenCom has been working on it.

Thirdly, accrued right, which is duly backed by law, is another issue affecting the contributo­ry pension scheme negatively.

The pension Act requires that government should pay the accrued rights of workers who transited to the contributo­ry pension scheme in addition to the savings in their RSAs.

To ensure that government pays the accrued rights, PenCom came up with a policy that workers entitled to accrued rights cannot access their RSAs until government pays their accrued rights into such RSAs and this policy has left many retirees without benefits months after retirement.

The last time the government paid accrued rights was in December, 2016, a developmen­t that has left retirees who left active service in 2017 unable to access their benefits.

There have been calls for PenCom to review its policy and allow retirees access to their RSAs as they await their usually delayed accrued rights.

The source said the problem is not with PenCom but on the government and that PenCom has been consistent­ly nudging the government to release funds to settle the backlog.

The source revealed that PenCom’s effort led to the recent release of the accrued right of those who retired in January and February 2017.

The source further said it was not possible to allow retirees access RSAs as the accrued right is usually higher than the contributi­ons accumulate­d in the RSAs.

Micro-pension scheme and access to contributo­ry healthcare are also two issues that are in limbo in the nation’s pension industry.

For a while now, PenCom has been on the verge of rolling out Micro Pension Plan (MPP) to guarantee financial security for informal sector players as well as boost Nigeria’s pension assets to over N20 trillion by 2020.

The pension Act expanded coverage of the CPS to the self-employed and persons working in organisati­ons with less than three employees.

However, the rollout remains in limbo just as retirees are taken off the National Healthcare Insurance Scheme (NHIS) at the point of retirement when they need healthcare the most in their lives.

The source in PenCom explained that the Commission is still trying to come up with a guideline to regulate micro pension as it affects people in the informal sector.

The source said the informal sector is largely unstructur­ed and unregulate­d unlike the formal sector of the economy and it is on the basis of this that PenCom is being careful in putting together the guidelines.

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