Recent reports that former captains of the
National Social Security Fund hatched a scheme to earn private interest
on money meant for purchase of stocks are not astounding given the
abuses that came to characterise the previous administration of the
pension fund.
Under the hideous scheme, top managers of the Fund
allegedly approached financial institutions looking to lure them into
their scheme as they sought to defraud the Fund of millions of
shillings. The proposals that were made to managers of financial
institutions would have seen them earn private interest on money meant
for the purchase of various stocks for the Fund. Money meant for share
purchases would be traded on the interbank market by the Fund’s brokers.
The interest earned would then be shared by the managers and the
brokers before proceeding to purchase the shares.
Ugly as they are, these schemes provide lessons
that we can only take for granted at the peril of the contributors to
the Fund, especially with the awareness that the initiators of these
shenanigans were senior managers at the Fund.
Much as the current management of the Fund is yet
to appear in the news for the wrong reasons, its contributors will need
assurances that they have entrusted their mostly hard-earned savings in
trustworthy hands.
Encouraging strides towards reformation have
already been taken and among them is the increased tracking of
communication between senior managers and the NSSF board. With plans to
liberalise the pensions sector underway, the hope is that the national
pension fund would benefit from increased oversight and stronger demands
for quality service provision.
After all the years of mismanagement and breach of
public trust, we need to break this crippling vicious cycle. Some truly
decent Ugandans have turned around moribund institutions into highly
efficient entities.
These Ugandans can be emulated. We challenge the new managers of the Fund to rise above these ugly schemes and turn the Fund into an entity of good repute in this country.
These Ugandans can be emulated. We challenge the new managers of the Fund to rise above these ugly schemes and turn the Fund into an entity of good repute in this country.
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