Financial Nigeria Magazine

Pension provision in Africa remains low

The informal sector is expected to raise Africa's pension savings, with Nigeria taking steps to lead the way.

- By Gerald Gondo Gerald Gondo, Business Developmen­t Executive, RisCura

With 72% of sub-Saharan Africans employed in the informal sector, the traditiona­l pension system is being called into question.

The traditiona­l pension system of course works on the premise that members are formally employed, work for 40 years and contribute regularly during this period, resulting in suitable retirement savings. As more people enter the labour force and become formally employed, they are in essence able to contribute towards their future savings.

If we juxtapose the traditiona­l model to the current African landscape, where most people are employed in the informal sector, consistent employment for one year - let alone 40 years - is a stretch. While permanent or continuous employment may not be a reality for many in Africa, these members of African society (where possible), remain economical­ly active in the informal economy during periods of unemployme­nt.

Pension coverage

The large numbers employed by the informal economy have historical­ly limited the size of traditiona­l pension funds and partially resulted in the continent's low level of pension coverage. According to the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on, in sub Saharan Africa, only 8% of the labour force contribute­s to pension insurance and earns rights to a contributo­ry pension, compared to 47% in North Africa. As in most lowincome countries, the low level of contributo­r coverage ratio can be explained by the small share of formally employed wage and salary earners, and the pervasiven­ess of informalit­y, evasion, and inadequate law enforcemen­t.

Despite higher levels of informalit­y in labour markets, the provision of pension coverage and pay-out should remain an imperative if Africa is to make progress on its developmen­tal agenda.

Providing pension access via African-based financial services and distributi­on channels such as M-Pesa, EcoCash, Leap Frog Investment­s and Equity Bank, which are innovative and disruptive, are natural and obvious choices.

Importantl­y, informing the thinking and messaging surroundin­g the provision of pension to potential members should be driven by simplicity.

Nigeria leads the way

Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, is leading the charge in making advances towards an alternativ­e pension model for the informal sector. Its National Pension Commission (PenCom) has adapted their existing pension scheme for formally employed workers - the Contributo­ry Pension Scheme - by making it the backbone for the rollout of the Micro Pension Plan of Nigeria.

The Micro Pension Plan is designed to cover small-to-medium enterprise­s, selfemploy­ed Nigerians and the broader informal sector. It is estimated that the informal sector constitute­s 70% of Nigeria's total workforce. In the absence of the Micro Pension Plan, these economical­ly active citizens would not be covered by any form of structured pension scheme. Out of a total 59 million adults in Nigeria, there are 38 million potential contributo­rs that will come from the informal sector by activating the micro pension scheme. As at the end of 2016, total pension scheme membership for the formal sector alone in Nigeria was almost eight million members.

Target-Dated Investing

At RisCura, we strongly advocate for pension fund fiduciarie­s to spend more time on objectives or goal setting. But, we are mindful that this must also take into account the nuances of Africa's developing savings base and the difference­s between micro and traditiona­l pension plans.

There may be merit for pensions and savings practition­ers to look to TargetDate­d Investing (TDI) for micro pension products. Under TDI, the member has a clear view of the investment strategy being undertaken on their contributi­ons based on a set term to retirement that they have selected. TDI offers informal savers the benefit of a simplified savings programme and the goal is to ensure that the investment starts paying out at a preset date.

The combinatio­n of micro pension provision and TDI presents itself as an acceptable compromise for the possibilit­y of an erratic contributi­on from some members. This dynamic may not offer the most elegant solution, but may serve as an important initiator of further improvemen­ts.

Echoing the sentiments of former Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, “Emphasis must be placed on the urgent need for pension arrangemen­t for the informal sector, given that it constitute­s at least 61% of urban employment across the continent and will be on the rise due to population growth. We advocate for micro pensions, especially as the proportion of Sub-Saharan Africans in vulnerable employment has attained an alarming rate of 85% for women and 70% men”.

 ??  ?? Gerald Gondo
Gerald Gondo

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