Summary
- More than 530,000 civil servants, including police and teachers, will in January have their take-home pay cut by 7.5 percent as they start contributing to their pension savings scheme.
- The employees attached to ministries and State agencies will see a portion of their salaries sliced for onward remittance to the soon to be created Public Service Superannuation Scheme (PSSS).
- This means that State workers will cede about Sh2.4 billion monthly or Sh28 billion to the fund that will emerge as Kenya’s largest pension scheme.
More than 530,000 civil servants, including police and teachers,
will in January have their take-home pay cut by 7.5 percent as they
start contributing to their pension savings scheme.
The
employees attached to ministries and State agencies will see a portion
of their salaries sliced for onward remittance to the soon to be created
Public Service Superannuation Scheme (PSSS).
This
means that State workers will cede about Sh2.4 billion monthly or Sh28
billion to the fund that will emerge as Kenya’s largest pension scheme.
Treasury
Cabinet Secretary Ukur Yatani will on Wednesday set the stage for the
setting up of PSSS—which will have a board and CEO— by announcing the
January date when civil servants will start contribution to the fund.
Mr
Yatani said the move is aimed at reducing the pension burden currently
borne in whole by the exchequer, especially in the Covid-19 era that has
seen revenue sources depleted.
Civil servants, unlike workers in the private sector, do not
contribute to their pension, with their benefits paid straight from
taxes.
The free benefits will increase the taxpayers’
pension burden to Sh121 billion in the year starting July from Sh15
billion in 2002.
Part of the pension burden has been
attributed to the government’s failure to push through necessary
reforms, including kick-starting the contributory
pension scheme that was first mooted eight years ago.
“Membership
to the scheme will be mandatory to all new entrants upon commencement
of the Act and all employees aged below 45 as at the date,” said a
Treasury brief on the fund.
“Employees aged 45 years
and above will have an option to join the scheme by completing the
Public Service Superannuation Scheme option form.”
Civil
servants were initially to contribute two per cent of their monthly
salary to the scheme in the first year, five per cent in the second and
7.5 per cent from the third year.
But the staggering
has now been stopped, with workers expected to contribute the 7.5 per
cent of their pay in the first year, starting January.
The government will match the contributions with an amount equivalent to 15 per cent of every workers’ monthly pay.
This
will be equivalent to about Sh6.9 billion monthly contribution or
Sh55.87 billion annually, turning pension expenditures to one of the
largest budget items.
The Treasury is spending more to
keep retired civil servants comfortable in retirement compared to health
(Sh111 billion), water (Sh83.3 billion) and energy (Sh72 billion.)
The
government had in 2017 timed the launch of the contributory pension
scheme to coincide with a bumper review of public servants’ pay.
Civil
servants’ basic pay increased by between 16 percent and 30 per cent in a
review that cost taxpayers Sh20 billion in the year starting July 2017,
a rise that was expected to ease the pain of the pension contribution
cut.
Past bids to slice a portion of the take-home pay
for civil servants has been vigorously contested in the past, leading to
the delays in implementation of the PSSS.
A 2009
actuarial study commissioned by the government found that there was a
pension liability of Sh499 billion at the time owed to civil servants
who have worked knowing the State would cater for the retirement costs.
The liability nearly doubled to Sh990 billion in 2014.
“Benefits
accrued prior to joining the new scheme shall be recognised in the form
of an amount acknowledged through the issuance of a letter recognising
accrued benefits at the date of joining the scheme under this Act,” said
the Treasury brief.
Mr Yatani’s move effectively
activates commencement of the PSSS Act 2012 Act that was assented to on
May 9, 2012, but was yet to be effected.
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