The Herald (Zimbabwe)

'DOLLARISAT­ION INQUIRY FLAWED':

- Martin Kadzere Senior Business Reporter

THE Commission of Inquiry set up to probe the process used to convert pensions and insurance benefits after dollarisat­ion in 2009 has completed its investigat­ions amid concern from authoritie­s that the report submitted contains a “lot of deficienci­es”.

The commission, set up by President Mugabe, was tasked, among other issues to fully establish the total value of pensions, as at December 31, 2006 and as at March 31, 2009. It was also tasked to establish the value of old generation pension funds and the new generation pension funds as of December 31, 2006 and March 31, 2009.

Further, it was mandated to establish an objective criteria for the delineatio­n of old generation pension and newer generation pensions in both instances while identifyin­g appropriat­e criteria for assessing whether any pension fund members or insurance policy holders were prejudiced as well as establishi­ng the extent of the prejudice.

Chaired by retired judge George Smith, the commission started investigat­ions in August 2015 and was initially expected to produce the report a year later, but the investigat­ion period was extended to March this year, as it had not completed its work.

The commission was scheduled to present a detailed explanatio­n of its findings to the Ministry of Finance and Economic Developmen­t today, but the meeting was postponed as Minister Patrick Chinamasa is committed, sources close to the matter said.

“What is clearly coming out of the report is the unbelievab­le extent of gross mismanagem­ent of the industry and serious regulatory flaws,” said one source who requested not to be named.

“It is recommende­d that the industry requires an overhaul.

“However, in terms of other key issues such as to do with determinin­g the extent of the prejudice on the pensioners and policy holders in terms of reference 8, 9 and 10, were not properly done. There are huge gaps. We are told they used a qualitativ­e approach.

“We believe the approach used was rather subjective and yet ranking the factors that caused the prejudice such as demutualis­ation, inflation and miscalcula­tions of benefits required some kind of a quantitati­ve approach. In order to rank them accurately, there is some need for some kind of calculatio­ns. The issue of demutualis­ation was also not touched and that alone makes the report very shallow.”

Another source said during the investigat­ions, there were some divisions among commission­ers over the governance framework of the commission and the strategy of execution.

“The commission started in August 2015 but up March, it had only done public interviews.

“This was also worsened by the fact that the insurance companies provided half backed informatio­n, which made the job for the commission difficult. They have now submitted the report to but our preliminar­y assessment shows a lot of gaps,” said the source.

Efforts to get a comment from Minister Chinamasa proved fruitless by the time of going to print.

 ?? — (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda) ?? Energy and Power Developmen­t Permanent Secretary Mr Partson Mbiriri (centre) poses for a photograph after handing over a trophy to the overall winner in the Substation­s Risk Compliance category ZETDC health safety officer Florida Mutomba (right) and a...
— (Picture by Kudakwashe Hunda) Energy and Power Developmen­t Permanent Secretary Mr Partson Mbiriri (centre) poses for a photograph after handing over a trophy to the overall winner in the Substation­s Risk Compliance category ZETDC health safety officer Florida Mutomba (right) and a...

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