Thursday, December 5th
2013
By MOSES MICHIRA The ability of
the National Social Security Fund ( NSSF) to manage the Sh180 billion it will
receive after Parliament&searchbutton=SEARCH'> Parliament raised
workers’ contributions to the fund has come into focus. The NSSF Bill 2013
passed by MPs on Wednesday increased workers’ contributions to six per cent of
their total earnings, up from the current monthly flat rate of Sh200. Employers
are also expected to match this. The increase will be implemented gradually to
hit a peak in five years and reduce the shock on workers.
However, because of
mega-corruption deals linked to the fund’s past management, there are concerns
over how well it will manage the cash. The figure is more than the assets NSSF
has accumulated since its formation 48 years ago, and poor workers who can’t
afford to join private pension schemes will account for the bulk of the
enhanced contributions. The State expects NSSF to hit the peak in retirement
savings of Sh180 billion in the fifth year of the new scheme, according to
Labour Cabinet Secretary Kazungu Kambi. This is equivalent to a fifth of the
Government’s current revenue. “We are looking at collecting Sh180 billion a
year from all workers when this scheme is fully operational,” said Mr Kambi,
projecting that there will be six million workers in the formal sector in five
years. Currently, NSSF collects Sh1 billion per month, or Sh12 billion
annually. Kenya’s average worker earns Sh36,066 a month, which works out to
Sh2,164, while their employer would be required to match the amount. The
country has 2.2 million workers in the formal sector who are also members of
NSSF, whose annual contributions top Sh110 billion. Less than 100,000 Kenyans
are members of private schemes, indicating that nearly every worker would be
affected by the enactment of the new laws. It is expected that President Uhuru
Kenyatta will sign into law the Bill whose impact would most be felt by
employees of small firms that are not members of private pension schemes. Such
small employers are now faced with a major increase on operational costs that
have been introduced by the law, as they would be required to match their
employees’ contributions. The over two million formal sector workers will be
required to raise their contributions to the fund once the Bill gets
Presidential assent from the Sh200 a month to an equivalent of 6 per cent of
their wage. Lost savingsGovernment employees would also be hard-hit because
they have not been making retirement contributions, but would not have to save
with NSSF as they await the formation of a public service pension scheme. The
new laws will, however, not affect workers in bigger firms that have pension
schemes. An employee earning Sh100,000 a month, for instance, will contribute a
maximum of Sh500 to NSSF if such a member belongs to a private scheme. “If one
is a member of a private scheme, they are free to contribute the bulk of their
savings there but they could still give it all to NSSF,” said Sundeep Raichura,
a consultant involved in drafting the new law. But allegations of mismanagement
at the Fund – which also claimed the careers of immediate former chief
executives Tom Odongo and Alex Kazongo – have been a source of concern for both
workers and Parliament&searchbutton=SEARCH'> Parliament. Shady
procurement deals relating to land, shares in listed companies and even construction
have painted NSSF in a bad light, with billions in members’ savings getting
lost, while the intended beneficiaries wallowed in extreme poverty. “The
provisions in the law are now water-tight to guarantee your contributions are
invested prudently,” said Raichura. “There are custodians and fund managers
whose role is to ensure that proper investment decisions are made to guarantee
the safety of pension funds,” he added. The new contributions would be phased
over the five-year period to allow members adjust their budgets to accommodate
the savings item. NSSF’s role will be limited to making recommendations on
investment proposals made by the investment managers, as the Kenya revenue
Authority has taken up its other main role of collecting the savings. But even
with the pending rise of member savings,
Parliament&searchbutton=SEARCH'> Parliament has been drawn to probe
several deals, including the extension works planned for the Sh6.7
billion-worth Hazina Trade Centre, which some MPs claimed had been heavily
inflated. NSSF also lost more than Sh1.5 billion that it invested in a
stockbroker that went under soon after receiving the funds, among other deals
where its top managers have been implicated.
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