Elderly persons from Tharaka-Nithi County when they protested delayed
disbursement of a cash transfer programme in August 2019. FILE PHOTO |
NMG
Tough economic times, blamed for the hand-to-mouth lifestyles,
means a majority of elderly Kenyans will remain actively engaged long
into their twilight years.
The upside is a large number
of matriarchs and patriarchs are unconsciously keeping diseases at bay
largely blamed on sedentary lifestyles that come with idleness during
retirement.
In its latest study on savings and credit
societies’ membership demographics, Sacco Societies Regulatory Authority
(Sasra) has called for an urgent review of products on offer with
special consideration given to active and experienced young old retirees
(Yold)- workers aged 65 years that comprise 273,000 or 5.51 percent of
the 4.9 million sacco membership.
In the next decade,
their number could rise above one million as another 872,000 now aged
between 51 to 59 years, clock the mandatory retirement age of 60 years.
“The
traditional practice of employer-based saccos is often that the members
normally withdraw from the membership immediately upon retirement from
formal employment,” says the report.
Farmer-based
saccos had 7.89 percent of their membership being the Yold’s population,
teacher saccos (3.5 percent) government saccos (1.8 percent) while
private sector saccos membership was at 4.69 percent and at 7.22 percent
for community-saccos.
“Deposit taking saccos need to
configure their management information systems to capture, reflect and
report on age and gender data that can be used to design and formulate
member-friendly financial services and products,” it said.
In its latest report on old age saving, market research firm
Infotrak says 84 percent of working Kenyans have never heard of old age
savings schemes or products.
“Kenyans deem pension
schemes to be too costly where information on products on offer remains
scanty. The government is not doing enough to increase uptake of pension
among young people and the high levels of corruption in the country’s
financial institutions emerged as a key hindrance for growth in
pensions,” added Infotrak chief executive Angela Ambitho.
RIGHT POLICY
And a research paper dubbed, Retirement Lived Challenges Experienced by Retirees, the Case of Retired Teachers in Makueni County urgently calls for establishment of a national desk in charge of retirement planning training.
Technical
University’s Annastacia Katee-Musila, Jamin Masasabi (Moi University)
and South Eastern University’s Harrison Maithya sampled 249 respondents
(173 were males and 76 females).
“We concluded that
inability to plan, save and invest for the future leads to suffering in
retirement. Retirees need to cautiously approach ‘new’ societal
responsibilities as key leaders, as a way of balancing their time to
avoid fatigue and distress,” they recommended.
The
study added that retirement training should start long before employees
exit employment to equip them with skills on passive income investments,
lifestyle skills that promote healthy living as well as money
management.
“Lacking post-retirement life skill
training sees retirees exiting work without any idea of what to expect
and how to deal with the uncertainties of unemployment. Majority go home
without medical cover that when life shocks like sickness hit them or
their close relatives they end up selling off the few resources they
own.
“The problem of poor planning is worsened by the
delay in disbursement of pension money that sees retirees taking up new
employment roles to complement their meagre savings. Retirees should
also reduce the number of volunteer-work in local development committees
or meetings they choose to attend to avoid burnout,” they added.
A
joint 2019 study by the Institute of Human Resource Management,
Enwealth Financial Services and Strathmore University called for a
national discourse on retirement study, saying over 80 percent of
Kenyans were staring at old age poverty.
Most Kenyans have no idea how much money they need to sustain their lives in retirement, the study said.
Enswealth
CEO Simon Wafubwa added, “A majority have no plan at all about their
health needs once they retire but instead put their hope in family and
friends’ donations. Only one in seven respondents are very confident of
outliving their retirement savings and this is a serious crisis in
retirement.”
County Pension Fund chief executive Hosea
Kili said retiring Kenyans require at least 65 percent of their working
salary to meet their daily upkeep needs.
Mr Kili blamed
the savings’ apathy for the suffering now witnessed among senior
citizens who heavily relied on government welfare stipend and medical
services.
Association of Retirement Benefit Schemes
council member Jane Gitau concurred saying a national discourse was
necessary for Kenya to get a policy that understands old people with
funding provided for research, social services as well as guiding
formulation of certificate, diploma to degree level curriculum on old
age studies.
Interestingly, insurance companies hardly
provide products for senior citizens while banks have no incentives or
discounts for senior citizens using their services, making for a gloomy
outlook for the elderly.
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