Bank of Uganda headquarters in Kampala. The reduction in commercial bank
holding of government securities signals a deepening of the financial
markets. FILE PHOTO
By Musinguzi Bamuturaki
The East African governments are facing fresh
pressures to boost social security for citizens with revelations that
thousands of retirees are increasingly dying poor, as countries dither
on instituting regulatory reforms and creating investment opportunities
for the existing schemes.
New figures on the state of EAC’s social security
indicate that Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi cover less than 10
per cent of their populations while Kenya’s coverage is relatively
higher at 15 per cent.
A new survey by Kituo Cha Katiba (KCK) - the Eastern Africa Centre for Constitutional Development (KCK), shows only two countries Tanzania and Rwanda have formal national social security policies although all EAC countries have in recent times been giving thought to social security and social protection issues and have either put on the table some policy options or bills for debate.
To address this low levels of social security
coverage KCK is recommending that a legal framework is needed to ensure
coverage initially of all employees in the formal sector (public and
private) and eventually the whole population if social security is to
become a right rather than a mere component of social welfare programmes
of governments.
Even the formal sector that is covered is only
partially covered and the depth of social protection is very shallow,
KCK observes, adding: “This is because the 5 – 10 per cent coverage
excludes most employees in the public service and formal private sector
on the one hand and on the other, the risks covered are limited. The
public service pension schemes usually provide for an old age or
survivors/dependent’s pension but other elements such as medical care,
housing, unemployment, education or maternity benefits are not covered.”
The informal (rural and urban) sector being where
the majority of the population works and lives needs special attention.
Some aspects could be mandatory (like minimum contributions for health
schemes, with some-exceptions) while others would be voluntary and
tailor-made products could be designed and incentives could be
introduced to attract informal sector workers, including tax incentives,
KCK recommends.
“It is easier to target the formal sector, but we
need to cover for informal sector as well because they will one time
retire,” the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) managing director in
Uganda, Mr. Richard Byarugaba concurs with KCK, adding: “For Uganda
there is a lot to be done. The existing schemes should be well developed
first before we look at complicated products.”
KCK advices the five EAC countries to adopt
mandatory schemes, supplementary schemes, and social assistance
programmes from their existing constitutional, policy and legal
frameworks, adding that the mandatory schemes ought to be strictly
regulated as they would cover the main elements of a social security
system.
Employers, financial institutions, professional
associations, insurance companies and social security institutions
themselves ought to be enabled to establish supplementary schemes to
provide social security benefits over and above those provided by
mandatory and social assistance programmes, KCK adds in its wide ranging
recommendations in a book titled, “Social Security and Social
Protection in the East African Community.”
According to the Uganda Capital Markets Authority
CEO, Mr Japheth Katto, what is on the table now concerns mandatory and
voluntary retirement benefits arrangements for those in formal and
informal employment. “It is a development worth noting,” he notes.
In Kenya, with the blessing of the regulator an
arrangement involving a bank, mobile money company and an employees
association has been put in place to cover the informal sector
employees. Byarugaba says the schemes cannot grow because of limited
investment avenues. The whole industry has to be supported holistically
in order to register growth. In terms of portability, KCK proposes
that, “There should be mechanisms to enable portability of benefits from
one scheme to another and from one EAC country.”
“You cannot have real free movement of labour
without portability of benefits. It is important to note that under the
EAC, there is a committee on Capital Markets Insurance and Pensions
which is handling issues of harmonisation,” Katto concurs with KCK.
According to KCK, NSSF Provident funds ought to
be abolished as provident funds and transformed into pension schemes
that are all contributory for the public sector and the formal private
sector. Byarugaba argues that: “Members should be given an option
either to enter a pension or provident fund. With a pension scheme they
can receive a monthly payment while with a provident fund they can get
their lump sum savings and put them in a single investment.”
The book aims at conducting a relatively
comprehensive and comparative review of the status of social security
and social protection, broadly conceived, for the people in the EAC
countries. The EAC is set up by the Treaty for the establishment of the
EAC 1999. In Article 120 of the treaty, social security and social
protection are visualised as social welfare rather than as rights.
When the EAC Protocol on the Common Market (2010)
was drafted, it also did not envision social security as a right. The
protocol recognises the need for Partner states to “coordinate and
harmonise their social policies to promote and protect decent work and
improve the living conditions of the citizens…for the development of the
Common Market (Article 39 (1).
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