A Bill to have Ugandan savers access 20 per cent of their
contributions to the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) to see them
through the economic hardships of the Covid-19 pandemic, has ignited
heated parliamentary and public debate, and ended in court after
opposition from the fund.
Activist
Morrison Rwakakamba and Agency for National Transformation Organisation
went to the Constitutional Court last week seeking an interpretation of
the NSSF Act which they say “is in contravention of the provisions of
the constitution of Uganda on fundamental rights and freedoms guaranteed
under the Uganda constitution’’.
The
court battle has been occasioned by a May 6 letter to the country’s
Finance Minister by NSSF Managing Director Richard Byarugaba, that says
that the proposal, if adopted, would not only collapse the fund but also
have wider negative implications on the economy.
The
immediate challenge, he said, would be raising liquidity of up to
Ush2.5 trillion ($655 million) needed within the next one year to fulfil
this obligation and circumventing the current law which doesn’t provide
for the much needed midterm access to the funds.
Mr
Byarugaba’s letter stirred up an uproar with proponents of the midterm
access, saying that in citing dire negative economic consequences, NSSF
was technically avoiding its natural responsibility, the purpose and
cause on which it was formed and forgetting the justification of its
existence which is to provide a social security safety net for its
members whenever their social security is under threat.
Mr
Rwakakamba and his organisation now want a court order directing NSSF
“to pay out at least 20 per cent to each of its members whose lives have
been affected by the current Covid-19 pandemic; and declare various
provisions of Section 19 of the NSSF Act unconstitutional especially
those that impose restrictions on mid-term access by contributors
contrary to the obligations as regards to the rights guaranteed under
the international human rights instruments ratified by Uganda.”
They contend that allowing members to access
20 per cent of their contributions will justify the purpose and
relevance of the fund since it is a social security fund whose sole
purpose is to help its members in such times when many have lost income,
employment and source of livelihood due to the pandemic.
But
in another turn of events, Mr Byarugaba has this week written to Fund
members informing them that the Fund wasn’t opposed to the proposal but
is being constrained by the law.
“We
shared with our line minister our understanding of the worst case
scenario of the economic implications of the proposal to pay out an
unplanned 20 per cent of the funds to its members. We must clarify that
the current legislation, NSSF Act Cap 222, that governs the Fund’s
operations does not provide for mid-term benefits and regrettably has
limited our ability to offer you new benefits,” he wrote.
The
proposed Bill seeking to amend certain provisions of the NSSF Act is
before parliament and has received support from legislators across the
political divide and House Speaker Rebecca Kadaga has ordered for it to
be fast-tracked.
Social security coverage
The
Bill seeks to expand social security coverage by making contributions
to the NSSF mandatory for all workers in the formal sector and also
allowing workers in both the formal and informal sectors to make
voluntary contributions to the Fund.
If
passed into law, it will provide for midterm benefits to members during
their working life that cover short-term to long-term needs such as
unemployment/income replacement, education, medical and housing.
The
NSSF is a statutory savings scheme that provides social security
services to private sector employees in the country and is funded by
contributions from employees and employers of five per cent and 10 per
cent respectively of the employee’s gross monthly wage.
This is paid to members who have reached the retirement age of 55.
Parliament,
the public and activists have in recent weeks piled pressure on NSSF to
give its members midterm access to 20 per cent of their current savings
to cushion them from the effects of the corona virus lockdown and
pandemic
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