Kenya’s public pension bill is set to
rise 29.1 per cent to Sh71.8 billion in the coming fiscal year, marking
the first in a series of sharp increments that will see taxpayers fork
out Sh104.4 billion in 2019/20 to keep retired civil servants
comfortable in old age.
Part of the pension time bomb
build-up has been attributed to the government’s failure to push through
necessary reforms, including kick-starting the long awaited
contributory pension scheme.
The time bomb has
continued to grow despite the decision eight years ago to increase the
retirement age from 55 years to 60 years.
The move was
meant to slow down the number of retirees entering the pension pool and
offer the government some headroom to set up the contributory pension
scheme, but the latest budget estimates show it has not reduced
taxpayers’ burden.
The estimates show that total
payouts to retired, injured or deceased public servants and their
dependants will rise from Sh55.6 billion in the current financial year
to Sh71.8 billion in the next budget.
At Sh71.8
billion, the amount is equivalent to about one per cent of the country’s
productivity or gross domestic product (GDP) and dwarfs the Health
ministry’s Sh61.6 billion allocation.
The amount will
then jump to Sh86.2 billion and Sh104.4 billion in fiscal 2018/19 and
2019/20 respectively, underlining the looming increase in the burden of
the defined benefits scheme at a time when more civil servants have been
hired to fill posts created by the 2010 Constitution.
There is no pre-funding of the pension liabilities and
the government runs the scheme on a pay-as-you-go basis using revenue
collections.
The bulk of the payouts are in the form of
commuted pension –amounts pensioners elect to receive in lump sum— a
choice that has minimised the benefit of drawing out the entitlements
over years.
Commuted pension, for instance, will rise
from the current Sh28.5 billion to Sh37.7 billion in the next financial
year while ordinary pension will jump from Sh26.8 billion to Sh33.8
billion in the same period.
The entitlements are in various forms, including service pension and gratuity that fall due on fulfilment of certain conditions.
Served minimum number of years
Pension
is payable to those who have served the minimum number of years –at
least 10 years for most civil servants and 12 years for subordinate
forest guards, prison and police officers.
Those who
have been compelled to retire early as a result of restructuring in the
public service or on medical grounds are also entitled to receive the
benefits.
The entitlements are not transferable and
individuals who quit government employment before retirement
automatically forfeit them.
The effective pension
granted is a fraction of the pensionable pay at the time of one’s
retirement, meaning the looming increase in public service salaries
starting July will further inflate the pension bill.
Teachers
take up the bulk of the entitlements in the defined benefit scheme that
is estimated to cover more than half a million individuals, including
nearly 200,000 pensioners.
More than 10,000 individuals
join the pension pool each year upon retirement. Payouts to retired
teachers and other public servants is projected to rise steadily from
Sh19.2 billion this year to Sh30.7 billion in 2019/20 while
disbursements to former military personnel will more than double from
Sh5 billion to Sh10.3 billion over the same period.
The
government has failed to move the current scheme to a defined
contribution plan, a reform that has been put hold since 2013 and which
would have eased pressure on taxpayers in the long term.
Under
the scheme, civil servants were to contribute two per cent of their
salary to the retirement scheme in the first year, five per cent in the
second and 7.5 per cent from the third year onwards.
The government, as the employer, was to match every worker’s monthly contribution with another 15 per cent of the salary.
Life insurance
The State was also to take out and maintain a life insurance policy worth a minimum of five times the member’s annual pensionable emoluments. The policy also envisaged disability benefits for each member of the scheme.
The State was also to take out and maintain a life insurance policy worth a minimum of five times the member’s annual pensionable emoluments. The policy also envisaged disability benefits for each member of the scheme.
Those
aged 45 and above were to be given the option of joining the proposed
scheme or remaining in the current one where benefits paid are computed
based on the length of service and salary in the final year.
Failure
to implement the reforms is seen as arising from the fear of a backlash
from civil servants to whom the monthly contributions would amount to a
pay cut.
The 2010 Constitution also guaranteed a
section of public servants that any pension changes will not leave them
worse off, raising another hurdle in passing reforms.
“The
law applicable to pensions in respect of holders of constitutional
offices under the former Constitution shall be either the law that was
in force at the date on which those benefits were granted or any law in
force at a later date that is not less favourable to the person,” the
Constitution says.
By keeping the status quo, the
government is betting on increased economic growth to generate revenues
sufficient to fund the growing pension bill and other expenditure.
While
taxpayers continue to bear the burden of compensating retired public
servants, a substantial number of the recipients are also suffering from
waiting for their stipends for years or even a decade, thanks to
corruption and bureaucracy.
The delayed payments —
captured by the Retirement Benefits Authority (RBA) and the Office of
the Ombudsman’s reports — means the retirees’ benefits are eroded by
inflation as they remain stuck in the bureaucratic wheel.
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