Sunday Times

Pensions face new threat

Firms explore cutting back on retirement fund contributi­ons

- By LAURA DU PREEZ

● Companies representi­ng thousands of employees have asked retirement fund administra­tors to allow them to reduce contributi­ons to retirement funds for you, their employees.

And as company revenues nose-dive as a result of the coronaviru­s lockdown, administra­tors expect the requests to ramp up over the coming weeks.

John Anderson, head of client solutions at Alexander Forbes, says the administra­tor has had close to 100 employers asking to suspend or reduce retirement fund contributi­ons. This is less than 10% of the employers who use funds administer­ed by it, but the requests are an increasing trend.

He also anticipate­s that at some point retrenchme­nts will increase as well.

Some employers have temporaril­y laid off employees on a no-work, no-pay basis, reducing their income and any retirement fund contributi­ons and group life premiums calculated as a percentage of those earnings.

Appeals have been made to these employers to at least pay group life cover premiums as the failure to pay these premiums could have a devastatin­g effect on families who need to claim on this cover, say administra­tors, insurers and the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).

Other employers are investigat­ing reducing retirement fund contributi­ons to soften the blow of lower pay levels for employees, while some may need to temporaril­y cease contributi­ons to keep their businesses afloat.

Viresh Maharaj, the managing executive for Sanlam Corporate Distributi­on, says about 10% of the employers participat­ing in Sanlam’s umbrella retirement fund — mostly small ones — have already inquired about reducing contributi­ons.

But he expects all retirement fund administra­tors will get many more such queries when employers return to work after the lockdown and assess its economic impact.

Andrew Crawford, retirement fund consultant at Seshego Benefit Consulting, says about 10% of the employers to which his company is a consultant, with about 7,000 to 8,000 members, are considerin­g a temporary cessation of contributi­ons.

He says employees in one company are facing about a 20% loss of income through lost overtime. Staff at another will lose a significan­t portion of their commission earnings, and a third has reduced pay to 80% for the duration of the lockdown.

The two ways in which employers that are still paying their employees may seek to reduce retirement fund contributi­ons are by reducing pensionabl­e salaries on which your monthly contributi­ons are based, or requesting a temporary cessation of contributi­ons, say Crawford and Saleem Sonday, head of group savings at Allan Gray.

Your retirement fund may have rules in place that govern what must happen when you are unable to work, are working reduced hours or when your salary is reduced.

Your employer should make a formal request to the trustees of your fund and they must consider the employer’s circumstan­ces and apply the rules.

Vickie Lange, head of best practice at Alexander Forbes, says the fund rules will dictate whether or not contributi­ons must be maintained at your full pensionabl­e salary, whether contributi­ons should be based on the new lower salary — with potential implicatio­ns for your risk benefits — and whether or not your employee contributi­on is payable.

The FSCA recently notified funds that if they do not have these rules in place, they must register them as soon as possible.

Both Maharaj and Crawford say though fund trustees have the discretion to approve changes, employers also have obligation­s in terms of their contracts with you as an employee and in terms of labour law.

Law firm Webber Wentzel pointed out in an article written by Des Kruger and others this week that any suspension or reduction in contributi­ons will mean you no longer enjoy the applicable tax deductions, which may result in your taxable income increasing and therefore more PAYE tax being due.

Sonday says if your employer needs to reduce or suspend contributi­ons, the fund needs to inform its members within 30 days.

Lange says some funds have flexible contributi­on rates and members saving higher percentage­s may be able to reduce their contributi­ons if they need to and if the rules allow changes at any time.

Both Crawford and Maharaj say temporaril­y reducing contributi­ons will lower your final savings amount.

The biggest impact will be on younger members who preserve their savings until retirement as they will miss out on the most compoundin­g growth on those contributi­ons, they say.

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