The Federal Government has not been
remitting the pension contributions of most of its workers into their
Retirement Savings Accounts under the Contributory Pension Scheme since
October last year.
This revelation was contained in the
2016 annual report of the Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria,
which was obtained exclusively by our correspondent on Wednesday.
PenOp stated in the report, “Compliance
with regard to remittances of pension contributions from the public
sector at both the federal and state levels have lagged notably. While
remittances from the Federal Government through the National Pension
Commission were last received for September 2015, some states have
outstanding remittances dating back over two years.”
The association, however, said private
sector remittances had been more consistent though impacted by the
current adverse economic environment in the country.
Most of the federal workers affected are
direct employees of ministries, who are not under the parastals but are
being paid by PenCom with the funds released from the Central Bank of
Nigeria.
It was also gathered that the Federal
Government had also failed to increase its contribution into the RSAs of
workers in the parastals by crediting their accounts with 15 per cent
of their total monthly emolument two years after the Pension Reform Act,
2014 increased the contribution to 18 per cent (10 per cent for
employers and eight per cent for the workers instead of the 7.5 per cent
that each was contributing before 2014).
The implication of the non-remittance of
the pension contributions to the workers’ RSAs is that upon retirement,
most of the workers will be unable to process their pensions until all
arrears are paid together with their accrued rights under the Defined
Benefits Scheme.
However, the Pension Fund Administrators may agree to pay the retirees if their unpaid arrears are negligible by then.
Amidst the dire economic challenges in
the country, PenOp said the aggregate pension assets under the CPS grew
by 15 per cent from N4.61tn as of the end of December 2014 to N5.3tn in
2015.
The association said the call to invest a
greater portion of the pension funds in infrastructure required clear,
calm, incisive and strategic thinking to achieve any notable success.
“With N5.3tn grown over an 11-year period, careless deployment could wipe these gains out in an instant,” PenOp said.
If looked at as a constituent part of
national economic strategy, PenOp said the focus would switch to how it
could support the industry to grow beyond N20tn.
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