Saturday, 09 March 2013 19:24 |
By Mkinga MkingaThe Citizen Reporter
Dar es Salaam.
The government is considering amending laws, which establishes social
security funds to have two strong pension funds which will cater for
both private and public sectors.
Responding to
a question from this paper after closing the Public Service Pensions
Fund annual general meeting, minister for Labour and Employment
Gaudentia Kabaka said having two strong social security funds had been
the idea of many stakeholders and the government had been digesting it.
She
said it was not easy to change all mechanisms, which enabled the
pension funds since they had been established by different laws. “The
government will take it to the Parliament when time allows,” she said.
On
Thursday Vice President Dr Mohammed Gharib Bilal received two new
members who were self-employed, one being a fisherman and the other a
vendor.
Dr Bilal asked the Public Service
Pensions Fund (PSPF) and other social security funds to ensure they
reached out to all eligible Tanzanians, saying according to the 2012
national census 22 million people were in the labour force.
“Make
sure that you reach out to as many Tanzanians as possible in formal and
informal sectors. Pension is for their life after retiring from work,”
Dr Bilal said. But in his remarks, PSPF board of trustees chairman
George Yambesi said since the inception of the PSPF in 1999 it had
managed to record about 309,767 public service members.
He
said PSPF had been providing members with attractive benefits. But he
stressed that the government had been delaying to honour its promises
such as paying for its employees.
In a quick
rejoinder, the Finance minister, Dr William Mgimwa, said the government
was committed to fulfilling its promises over social security
arrangements.
Speaking at the opening of PSPF
annual general meeting, acting director general Adam Mayingu said the
fund size had grown to Sh1.09 trillion by June last year. He explained
that the growth accounted for a Sh161.78 billion surplus occasioned in
the last financial year.
“Our surplus came
from contributions, investments and other incomes. It reduced expenses
and operating expenses,” Mr Mayingu said.
He
said in the 2011/12 fiscal year, total fund contributions amounted to
Sh444.10 billion compared to Sh392.90 billion in 2010/11. He noted that
the increase was 13.03 per cent and had been attributed to an increase
in members’ salaries by 12 per cent.
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