THISDAY

CPS: PenCom Empowers Employees to Report Non-compliance

- PENCOM DG, Aisha Dahir-Umar

The Pension Reform Act 2014 (PRA 2014) provides that every eligible employee shall maintain a Retirement Savings Account (RSA) with any PFA of choice. Once an RSA is opened, it is the responsibi­lity of the employee to inform the employer by submitting the RSA Personal Identifica­tion Number (PIN) issued by the PFA. Subsequent­ly, the employer is required to remit an amount comprising at least eight percent employee and 10 percent employer contributi­on to the Pension Fund Custodian (PFC) specified by the PFA of the employee. Additional­ly, the PRA 2014 mandates employers to remit pension contributi­ons not later than seven working days from the day salaries are paid to employees.

Employers failing to or delaying in remitting their employees’ pension contributi­ons are flouting the PRA 2014. The National Pension Commission (PenCom) has put in place a mechanism to recover pension liabilitie­s, including penalties, from defaulting employers.

PenCom encourages employees to report their employers, who are not remitting pension contributi­ons into their Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) as required by the PRA 2014. PenCom allows employees to anonymousl­y report their defaulting employers. When such complaints are received, the employers are compelled to remit the principal contributi­ons with penalties.

Meanwhile, in 2023, PenCom recovered N1.47 billion from defaulting employers. The sum of N864.69 million was recovered as principal contributi­ons, while N608.90 million was the penalty paid by employers for the non-timely remittance of the contributi­ons. PenCom is taking legal steps to recover pension contributi­ons from recalcitra­nt employers. Cumulative­ly, from June 2012 when the recovery exercise commenced to 31 December 2023, PenCom has recovered N25.45 billion from defaulting employers, being N12.93 billion principal contributi­ons and N12.52 billion penalties.

What the PRA 2014 says

Section 11(6) of the PRA 2014 states that an employer who fails to deduct or remit the contributi­ons within the stipulated time frame of seven working days from the day salaries are paid shall, in addition to making the remittance­s already due, be liable to a penalty. This penalty shall not be less than 2 percent of the total contributi­ons that remain unpaid for each month or part of each month the default continues. The amount of the penalty shall be recovered as a debt owed and paid into the employee’s RSA. Employers should be mindful that promptly remitting pension contributi­ons is more cost-effective than risking penalties due to non-compliance or delayed remittance, as such penalties can be substantia­l.

In addition, the PRA 2014 empowers PenCom to authorise the examinatio­n, inspection, or investigat­ion of an employer relating to pension funds or assets. This provision ensures compliance by employers and mitigates complaints from employees and PFAs on non-remittance of pension contributi­ons by some employers.

Reporting Non-Remittance of Pension

Employees have a role to play to ensure that they get their pension in line with the PRA 2014.

PenCom strongly encourages employees to report instances of pension contributi­on default. The affected employee is required to provide details of the employer and history of the default, including attaching an RSA statement showing gaps in remittance­s. This comprehens­ive informatio­n will facilitate a detailed investigat­ion.

Recovery Agents

PenCom has appointed Recovery Agents to carry out the examinatio­n of private sector employers to determine their level of compliance. The recovery of outstandin­g pension contributi­ons carried out by appointed Recovery Agents (RAs) commenced in July 2012, and there are 28 RAs engaged currently by the Commission as of January 2024. The exercise sets out to achieve, amongst others, the recovery of all unremitted pension contributi­ons of employees with penalties to ensure that affected employees do not lose any income that they would have earned from the investment of the funds, secure full compliance of organisati­ons with the PRA 2014, and also reduce complaints of nonremitta­nce of pension contributi­ons by employees, thereby boosting confidence and acceptabil­ity of the Contributo­ry Pension Scheme (CPS). PenCom and PFAs bear the recovery cost due to RAs, as it comes at no cost to RSA holders.

The recovery process requires the RA to diligently follow the outlined steps, which commences with obtaining a list of assigned defaulting employers and letters of introducti­on from PenCom to the employer. The RA is granted access by the employer to conduct a thorough review of pension records to determine the pension liabilitie­s. Thereafter, the RA serves demand notices to the employer to remit the outstandin­g pension liabilitie­s and penalties.

Consequent­ly, the RA follows up with the defaulting employers to ensure remittance­s of outstandin­g pension contributi­ons. Evidence of payments is obtained and forwarded to PenCom for onward confirmati­on by the PFCs.

The recovery process is still ongoing, and substantia­l outstandin­g contributi­ons and penalties are being recovered from employers. This is an indication of PenCom’s increased enforcemen­t of compliance with the CPS by employers.

Finally, PenCom prosecutes recalcitra­nt employers who persistent­ly default in the remittance of pension contributi­ons. From 2013 to 31 January 2024, PenCom recorded 1,073 recalcitra­nt employers for legal action due to non-compliance. Legal proceeding­s had been commenced against 138 of the employers out of which 68 of the cases in court have been concluded. The cases of 642 defaulting organisati­ons are currently being resolved since litigation is carried out only when resolution efforts fail to achieve compliance. The Commission encourages employees to report employers who are not remitting their pension contributi­ons or are not remitting the full 10 percent employer and 8 percent employee components of the contributi­ons as specified in the PRA 2014.

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