Saturday Star

Saving for retirement is not only about you

You may have a strong personal imperative to save for retirement, but there is also a national imperative to do so. reports

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If all working people in South Africa saved an appropriat­e amount for their retirement, children’s education and housing, it would provide investment funding that could help pull our country out of the economic doldrums, according to a paper presented at the Actuarial Society of South Africa’s annual convention in Cape Town this week.

Actuaries Guy Chennells and Keagan Kistan from Old Mutual told the convention that increasing our savings through our retirement funds is the most effective way to boost the nation’s savings and meet the need for economic growth.

Yet they found that more money is leaving South African retirement funds than is going in: total retirement savings are actually declining because we are drawing out more than we are contributi­ng when the costs of group life assurance and administra­tion are included.

Chennells and Kistan say in their paper, “Can retirement savings save South Africa?”, that this was the case in 2014 and last year, when funds experience­d a net outflow of 1.88 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), which means the country is “being starved of a critical savings pool”.

Although improved retirement savings alone cannot save South Africa, it can play an important part and will at the same time improve our individual lives, as most of us do not save enough for retirement, the pair say.

They say if we all contribute­d closer to the maximum 27.5 percent that we can deduct from our taxable income, it would have a huge impact on the country’s savings. They say that while policymake­rs should address the issue of preserving savings, stopping the leakage of retirement savings through non-preservati­on will have less of an impact on the economy than an increase in contributi­ons.

Chennells and Kistan say for this reason it is worthwhile for the government and financial services industry to focus on reforming the retirement system.

The two actuaries admit that increasing household savings in an environmen­t where household savings have been declining for the past two decades is “a challenge” and they say that further work is required to determine how we can be encouraged to save more. They say the government needs to design systems that support us saving more by, for example, helping us to get out of debt and manage our finances optimally.

They suggest that employer-sponsored savings through retirement funds could be put to greater use to help you save for all your needs and recommend that methods used successful­ly in other countries should be investigat­ed.

The reasons for focusing on retirement savings as a vehicle for saving are:

• The savings are long-term in nature and hence can be used to fund long-term projects, such as infrastruc­ture, which enable economic activity;

• The government is devoting significan­t resources to improving retirement savings levels and coverage;

• The industry is well-establishe­d and is seeking solutions to the problem of under-saving; and

• Most of us do not save nearly enough for a secure retirement.

Chennells and Kistan say the retirement savings “system” is an efficient way to channel any increases in household savings, because the savings are deducted directly from payroll, you pay lower institutio­nal fees on your savings, and you enjoy tax advantages.

In addition, there are benefits for employees, because your employer may sponsor your contributi­ons to a fund and can use its resources to support your financial well-being through positive communicat­ion and education.

Chennells and Kistan identified seven “levers” that could be pulled to increase national savings (see table):

1. Getting us to preserve 100 percent

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