Taxpayers could be losing billions of shillings annually due to
weak systems for payment of pension claims at the
Treasury, the auditor general has warned.
Treasury, the auditor general has warned.
A performance audit has revealed
that the Pensions Department (PD) at the Treasury does not compel
retirees and dependents to present life certificates before payment is
made.
According to the audit, in case of death of a
pensioner, the Pensions Department relies on family to alert it on the
occurrence, armed with the death certificate and the pension number of
the deceased for certification.
“Interviews with staff
at the Pensions Department disclosed that pensioners and dependants do
not present life certificates and neither do the PD follow up to have
them submitted,” read the audit report.
This means that
the State could be paying relatives and dependants of dead people
retirement benefits, helped by the growing use of debit cards and mobile
banking, which do not require the physical presence of beneficiaries in
banking halls.
The audit also shows there are no triggers in the system for
payment to be stopped after a certain period to necessitate proof of
life.
To correct the anomaly, the Auditor-General
recommends that the Pensions Department works with the Civil
Registration Department to get monthly data on registered deaths.
The
report comes after a headcount at the Pensions Department revealed that
about 40,000 retired civil servants are dead but remain on the State
payroll.
The two-month census that started in February
last year did not capture about 50,000 pensioners, adding that it has
confirmed that 40,000 of them are dead.
The headcount
was informed by the need to curb the ballooning pensions bill that
increased to Sh104.4 billion in the year starting July, up from Sh86.2
billion in the previous year and Sh15 billion in 2002.
Most
pensioners were previously paid through the State-owned Postbank, which
demanded that the retirees appear in-person to withdraw their benefits.
However,
the automation of the banking sector and extending the payments to
Kenya’s 42 banks has reduced the need for pensioners to collect their
benefits from tellers.
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