The Philippine Star

SSS to raise members’ contributi­ons next year

- By MARY GRACE PADIN

State-run Social Security System (SSS) will push through with the planned increase in its members’ contributi­ons in 2018, a year after President Duterte granted a P1,000 hike in benefits to its pensioners.

In an interview Friday night, SSS president and chief executive officer Emmanuel Dooc said the proposed hike in members’ contributi­ons would be rolled out next year, after it gets the needed amendments in its charter, in time for the implementa­tion of the Tax Reform for Accelerati­on and Inclusion Act (TRAIN).

A bill seeking to amend the SSS Charter, as provided in Republic Act 1161 or the Social Security Act, is currently being deliberate­d in the Senate. The TRAIN bill is also being discussed in the Senate.

Dooc said among the provisions of the new SSS bill is to empower the state fund to increase its members’ contributi­ons.

“It won’t need a Presidenti­al Decree anymore, it is being fixed in the (charter) amendments...That will empower us to increase the contributi­ons,” Dooc said.

The SSS chief said the bill is expected to be passed before the end of the year with the Legislativ­e-Executive Developmen­t Advisory Council (LEDAC) including the bill in its priority measures.

“It’s already in the technical working group in the Senate. Tomorrow Oct. 3 we’ll have a hearing. Hopefully, there will be a committee report after that. Then we go to the plenary then bicam (bicameral committee),” he said.

The increase in members’ contributi­ons was announced last January, together with President Rodrigo Duterte’s approval of the P1,000 pension hike for retired SSS members.

The additional pension was released last March, with the January and February tranches given retroactiv­ely.

Dooc, as well as the economic managers in the Cabinet maintained that additional contributi­ons are necessary to keep the state fund running, even with the pension increase.

Under the original proposal, the premium hike of active SSS members will be implemente­d in tranches until 2022, starting with a 1.5 percent increase in May this year. The SSS earlier said members’ premium could go up to 17 percent from the current 11 percent until 2022.

The maximum salary credit was also supposed to be increased to P20,000 from P16,000 last May.

However, since the contributi­on hike was deferred to next year, Dooc said the SSS would need to catch up with the foregone revenues it could have collected if it implemente­d the increase on schedule.

He, however, declined to to give the new rate of the increase to be imposed in 2018.

“Had we implemente­d the 1.5 percent increase this year, plus the maximum salary credit increasing it from P16,000 to P20,000, that would have fetched us P23 billion additional contributi­on this year. We will chase that because that’s in our equation. We will try to collect everything,” he said.

Dooc said the premium hike would help extend the life of the pension fund up to 2051 from the current actuarial life of until 2042.

He said this could be further prolonged with more members expected to enter the system with the introducti­on of new amendments, including the mandatory contributi­on of new overseas Filipino workers.

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