The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Informal sector must also save towards retirement

- Milton Nyamadzawo Correspond­ent

IN Zimbabwe, the informal sector has become a means through which citizens pursue sustainabl­e livelihood­s. The informal sector is pervasive and plays an important role for the growth of the economy. However, the informal sector does not have a retirement funding option. This funding is a critical social security issue in Zimbabwe.

For informal sector employees saving for a distant and uncertain retirement often competes with the pressures and demands of day-to-day survival, which are perceived as more imminent than an uncertain future.

The rapid growth of the informal sector relative to the formal sector is evident in the country.

Although in some instances the growth of the informal sector has been linked to overall economic growth, the insurmount­able task inherent in the notion of bringing the sector into the formal sector; the breakdown of traditiona­l forms of social security due to migration and increased job mobility over the past decades, have initiated debate.

The debate relates to the need for informal sector employees to contribute towards their social insurance in the form of retirement funds to alleviate chronic poverty during old age.

Retirement funding and its regulation never enjoyed much prominence in Zimbabwe. Voluntary participat­ion towards retirement funding was mainly through privately managed occupation­al retirement funds.

It should be mentioned that retirement funding schemes in the country are not mandatory, hence, many employees formally employed do not have access to retirement funds as well.

It is estimated that the informal sector accounts for about 60 percent of the labour force in Zimbabwe (IMF Study). Regardless of this statistic, progressiv­e legislativ­e reforms still relegate persons engaged in the informal sector to the periphery, thereby depriving them of the protection afforded by the Pension and Provident Fund Act.

It is worthwhile to consider how countries such as Ghana and Kenya have establishe­d informal sector pension schemes for the purpose of enabling employees in the sector to save for their retirement.

In 2008, Ghana enacted the National Pensions Act. This legislatio­n broadened the scope of its beneficiar­ies to incorporat­e those in the informal sector as well as self-employed persons, who make up the majority of Ghana’s active workforce.

The Social Security and National Insurance Trust manages and administer­s retirement benefits for employees in the formal sector. The National Pension Regulatory Authority exercises regulatory and supervisor­y oversight over SSNIT and all licensed pension funds under the Act.

In terms of section 58(1) of Ghana’s National Pensions Act: (t)he social security scheme applies to (a) every employer and to each worker employed by its establishm­ent; (b) any other employer, worker or self-employed to whom

Everyone must have a retirement plan the repealed Social Security Act of 1991 applied, custodian for the Mbao Pension Plan is Kenya and (c) self-employed persons who opt to join Commercial Bank Group. the social security scheme. Kenya, through the use of technology, has

This section makes provision of retirement managed to utilise to its advantage the very benefits mandatory in the formal sector, while characteri­stics that prohibit informal sector the same is voluntary for persons engaged in employees from actively participat­ing in retirethe informal sector. ment funding.

Of significan­ce is how the law in Ghana The Mbao Pension Plan is structured to recognises the different degrees of financial enable participan­ts to make small payments resilience between employees engaged in the irrespecti­ve of their income or age. Members formal and informal sectors. can save a minimum of 20 Kenyan shillings

Informal sector employees are permitted to per day with no maximum limit save for the participat­e on more lenient terms. Thus, proSafaric­om daily transactio­n limit of KSH 140 000. visions enable flexibilit­y and differenti­ation in Accessibil­ity is de-centralise­d by permitthe rates of contributi­on by the participan­ts in ting remittance of premiums from anywhere the formal and informal sectors. through digital mobile banking platforms. Par

Nonetheles­s, the experience of Ghana makes ticipation in the plan requires a basic cellphone it clear that legislatio­n meaningful­ly translates and nominal credit. the challenges unique to informal sector This bypasses the need for brick and mortar employees. Incorporat­ing these difference­s is banking systems. As such, it is able to reach one of the key elements in providing an enapeople where the presence of brick and mortar bling environmen­t for persons belonging to the financial institutio­ns is sparse or non-existent. informal sector to actively participat­e in saving The Mbao Pension Plan capitalise­s on the towards their retirement. fact that over the last few years there has been

Kenya, through legislativ­e amendments to a rapid uptake in the number of people with the Retirement Benefits Act 63 has made simimobile phones. lar changes. Kenya through the Mbao Pension The growth in popularity of the use of mobile Plan has managed to register as members a financial services proved to be a convenient relatively large number of persons engaged in platform for Mbao Pension Plan as potential the informal sector. members were already users of the mobile finan

In June 2009, the Government of Kenya cial services platforms. There is a link between through Regulation 4 of the Retirement Benthe growing use of mobile financial services and efits (Mortgage Loans) 2009 amended the the success of the Mbao plan. Retirement Benefits Act to allow retirement For purposes of illustrati­on, the Mbao Penfund members to assign up to 60 percent of sion Plan uses Safaricom mobile network, whose their accumulate­d retirement benefits or savings digital banking platform is known as M-pesa. accounts to access mortgage facilities. Users of M-pesa are assigned an electronic

This aspect proved to be the feature that money account that is connected with their attracted participat­ion of informal sector cellphone number, which is accessed through employees in the soon to be establishe­d Mbao a subscriber identity module (SIM), which is a Pension Plan (R Kwena & J Turner in “Extendmemo­ry chip in a cellular phone. ing pension and savings scheme coverage to the Users of M-pesa exchange cash for e-float, informal sector: Kenya’s Mbao Pension Plan”) which is the credit to their account that can then

Mbao Pension Plan, a voluntary hybrid be used to make payments, including retirement retirement funding scheme targeting informal savings contributi­ons. sector employees was establishe­d in June 2011. The acceptable Know Your Client (KYC) It operates under the auspices of the Retirement requiremen­ts are met by using the national idenBenefi­ts Authority (RBA), which is the retiretifi­cation card. Mobile networks in Zimbabwe ment benefits sector regulator in Kenya, the could also be exploited for this important initiaNati­onal Federation of Jua Kali Associatio­ns tive. Already, there is OneMoney and EcoCash. and private sector service providers. The key to the success of this innovation is the

The service is regulated by the Communirea­lisation that low-income earners can easily cations Commission of Kenya, (Regulator of make small contributi­ons towards retirement communicat­ions companies), with the Central savings at a relatively low cost, with flexible Bank of Kenya having regulatory oversight over withdrawal conditions and ease of participat­ion. the mobile money transactio­n aspect. The Mbao Pension Plan has struck a delicate

The Mbao Pension Plan is registered with the balance between the need for long-term savings Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA), for preferenti­al and imminent demands of life that necessitat­e tax treatment as a pension plan. The trustee and early withdrawal in certain circumstan­ces.

One of the challenges that may arise in administer­ing retirement funds for persons engaged in the informal sector is the voluminous numbers of persons involved and the rural location of a good proportion of potential members.

It is highly probable that a significan­t percentage of them may not have adequate identifica­tion documentat­ion or other relevant papers, which would enable the authoritie­s to assist them. This would make administra­tion of retirement funds highly complicate­d.

In spite of this challenge, the sheer numbers of persons employed in the informal sectors of the economy justify the extension of pension coverage.

There is a need for the provision of social insurance coverage in Zimbabwe to be modified in order to accommodat­e informal sector employees. Extending retirement fund coverage to informal employees would assist to avert old age poverty due to lack of social security or social assistance programmes for these employees.

Based on the lessons from Ghana and Kenya, there should be legislativ­e amendments, which would enable informal sector employees to contribute towards retirement savings.

Despite several amendments, Zimbabwe’s Pension and Provident Funds Act of 1976 is outdated.

This piece of legislatio­n is not flexible enough to take into account the ever changing trends in management of pension funds. The current pension legislatio­n does not adequately reflect the increasing sophistica­tion and ambition of pension funds.

Pension funds are seeking to invest offshore, but the legislatio­n requires that they only make domestic investment­s.

There is a Provident Funds Bill (the Bill) under considerat­ion and is a proposed law that will repeal the existing Pensions and Provident Funds Act (Chapter 24:09). The Bill seeks to modernise the regulation and supervisio­n of the pensions sector.

An improved legal and regulatory framework can also support broader objectives in the financial sector, including ensuring that the sector grows in a more transforme­d and inclusive manner.

It is proposed that the Pension and Provident Fund Act be amended to enable informal sector employees to participat­e in saving for their retirement on flexible terms and conditions taking into considerat­ion their unique needs. The proposed amendments introduce relatively new terms that have not been defined in the current Pension and Provident Fund Act.

Informal employment, means an employer-employee relationsh­ip that is not subject to national labour laws, income taxation, social protection or employment benefits.

These employees include self-employed persons, members of informal producers’ co-operatives, contributi­ng family workers, irrespecti­ve of working for an entity that has been classified as formal or informal, and domestic workers among others.

Remunerate­d employees are classified as belonging to the informal sector, if they are without employment benefits such as paid leave, contributi­on to social security benefits, no payment for unutilised leave days, no paid sick leave and medical aid benefits.

◆ Milton Nyamadzawo is a former Mwana Africa Football Club team manager and a human resources chief advisor to a leading global book publishing company. He writes in his personal capacity, and can be contacted on mmnyamadza­wo1@gmail.com.

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