National Social Security Fund (NSSF) has defend the proposed
Transformation Bill from criticism saying the Bill takes into account
the existence of private schemes.
The National Social Security Fund Bill, 2012 seeks to position NSSF
as a public mandatory social security scheme covering all employees in
the formal and a voluntary scheme for the self-employed in the informal
sector who wish to contribute.
In a statement yesterday, Acting Managing Trustee Tom Odongo said the
Bill had been drawn to address the national social security plight and
is not aimed at antagonising existing private schemes.
Private retirement benefit schemes, he said, have fears that the
proposed changes to the NSSF functions will hurt other players in the
industry.
The Association of Retirement Benefits Schemes (ARBS) had threatened
to oppose the proposals in the Bill, notably raising of contributions
and the planned transformation of the public pension fund into a pension
scheme, saying the move threatens their business.
But in a rejoinder, Odongo said failure to provide an expanded social
security product would necessarily discriminate various sectors of the
economy that are currently neither covered by NSSF nor by the private
schemes.
Odongo said social security is important for the well being of workers, their families and the entire economy.
“Social security is an indispensable part of the Government’s social
policy and an important tool to alleviate poverty,” he said, adding
that the Bill, which seeks to expand social security coverage would
benefit members from the time they join until they retire.
Opt out model
“Unfortunately, the occupational schemes currently cover about
350,000 people only excluding public service schemes, a situation that
is regrettable,” he said.
He discounted the notion that the Bill will starve other schemes off
business, saying an ‘opt out model’ for schemes meeting specific
reference tests had been incorporated.
Under the new arrangement, NSSF would be regulated by the Retirement
Benefits Authority — which would ensure issues of governance, prudent
investment and ‘opt out’ options are addressed. “The pie is too big for
all of us and we us NSSF commit to fairness in recruitment of members,”
he said.
The association comprises about 100 of the biggest pension schemes
that control more than 70 per cent of the country’s retirement savings
pool. The entire sector is estimated at Sh450 billion.
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