Tag: CPS

  • CPS contributors hit 6.196m

    CPS contributors hit 6.196m

    Contributors under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) increased from 6,090,301 in the first quarter of 2013 to 6,196,956 in the second quarter of last year,National  Pension Commission (PenCom) has said.

    This is an increase of 1.75 percent.

    In a survey, it said at the end of the second quarter, the total value of pension assets stood at N4.49 trillion from N4.2 trillion recorded in the first quarter, an increase of N281.5 billion or 6.69 percent.

    The increase in scheme memberships, according to the statistics, was  explained by Retirement Saving Account (RSA) holders; it accounted for a proportional contribution of 98.94 percent of total pension scheme memberships during the second quarter.

    Approved Existing Schemes (AES) and Closed Pension Fund Administrators (CPFA) accounted for the balances of 0.66 and 0.40 percent. The total memberships of CPFA and AES were 24,622 and 44,351.

    Analysis of total RSA registrations for both public and private sectors shows that total RSA registrations increased by 1.77 percent from 6,024,599 in the first quarter. The private sector recorded highest number of RSA registrations at 3,121,262, accounting for 50.91 percent of registrations.

    The public sector also witnessed an increase in RSA membership as registrations marginally increased from 2,994,562 in the first quarter to 3,010,106, representing an increase of 0.52 percent.

    In all, the public sector accounted for 49.09 percent of total RSA registrations at the end of the quarter under review.

    Analysis of the age distribution of RSA holders shows that RSA holders  ranging from 30 to 39 accounted for the highest proportion of registrations in the second quarter at 39.39 percent. The age category 49 and below accounted for 77.96 percent of RSA contributors.

    The report further showed RSA registrations by Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) market share. It showed that PenCom categorised performance of PFAs into top three, five and  10 PFAs; there are also bottom three, five and 10.

     The ranking of PFAs by some registered contributors shows increases in the shares of the top three, five and 10 PFAs as the shares increased from 45.44, 62.39 and 87.30 percent in the second quarter to 46.68, 63.78 and 87.77 percent.

    However, while the share of the bottom three and five PFAs decreased marginally by 0.01 percent, those of bottom 10 PFAs decreased by 0.47 per cent.

    A review of the range of market share of RSA registrations by some PFAs shows that 75 percent of the PFAs have less than 500,000 RSAs in their portfolio.

    Four PFAs had between 500,000 and one million RSAs under them. One PFA, however, has over one million RSAs under it.

    The ranking of PFAs by total contributions shows that the top three PFAs accounted for 47 percent of contributions. Similarly, the top five PFAs accounted for 62.77 percent of all contributions received in the same period.

    The analysis further shows that while the bottom three PFAs accounted for 0.26 percent of all contributions, the bottom five PFAs accounted for 1.20 percent of total contributions.

    Similarly, a review of PFAs’ rank by size of RSA assets shows that the top three, five, and 10 PFAs accounted for 45.37, 62.23 and 87.07 percent of total RSA assets.

    The bottom five and 10 PFAs, showed some improvements in the proportional share of pension assets under their management as the share for the bottom five PFAs increased by 2.18 percent, while that of the bottom 10 increased to 12.93 percent.

  • Lecturers decry inadequacies in CPS

    College of Education lecturers have called on the Senate to ensure that their retirement benefits from the computation of the old scheme are incorporated into the proposed amendment of the Contributory Pension Scheme.

    This is to ensure that the wide gap between old and new schemes are reasonably reduced through proper legislation, to save the dying souls of retirees from mutilated pensions.

    The call is contained in a paper presented to the Senate by the Committee of Chief Lecturers of the Federal College of Education (Special), Oyo, Oyo State, which was made available to The Nation.

    The paper is the committee’s contribution to the ongoing debate towards the amendment of the 2014 Pension Act.

    It stated that though motives behind the establishment of the contributory pension scheme are commendable and laudable, its  implementation as it affects retiring officers now, has put them into  penury, as they have  been grossly short-changed considering what they would have collected if the old scheme had been used to compute their retirement benefits.

    The committee said: “A situation where Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) have been empowered to pay pension for 10 years under the 2014 Act, is very inhuman to retiring civil servants. Simply put, it means that retired officers are expected to die before 10 years. It is particularly disheartening when it is realised that colleagues in the state civil service that does not  subscribe to the scheme do not  have same problem.’’

    Observing disadvantages of the contributory pension scheme, the committee asserted that officers that retired from 2009 till date after 35 years of service with 28 to 32 years  service under the old pension scheme are  receiving 15 to 25 per cent  of their last salary as monthly pension, whereas the old scheme  stipulated 80 per cent of the last salary as pensions.

    ‘’Even, sub-section 4[c] of the 2014 Act stipulates a monthly pension that is not less than 50 per cent of monthly remuneration at the date of retirement. Neither the commission nor the administrators have been doing this. In the old scheme, pensions are paid for life, but in the new contributory scheme, pensions are paid for only 10 years.  In the old scheme, workers did not contribute directly because it was solely funded by the employer, but in the contributory scheme workers contribute 72 per cent of their salaries.’’

    It added that this is the major reason why monthly pensions of some junior officers   in the old scheme are far above those of their senior officers that  retired under  the  new scheme.

    ‘’Since our colleagues that retired from 2009  till today under the contributory scheme have been collecting monthly pensions that cannot guarantee  minimum comfort at  old age, we request  that terms and conditions of service when we  entered  the service be maintained still. While some government  parastatals and establishments have opted out, others who have seen the deficiencies are about to do so.”

  • World Bank to assist with US$8 billion in 4 years

    World Bank to assist with US$8 billion in 4 years

    THE World Bank has approved a Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) for Nigeria, which will increase its development assistance for job creation, social service delivery and governance to about US$2 billion per year.

    The initiative will run through the International Development Association (IDA) and International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) financing.

    The new CPS, which covers 2014-2017 financial years, introduces a change in the country’s borrowing status.

    Nigeria was declared credit worthy for IBRD financing last year and is officially entering blend status from July 1, 2014.

    A statement from the World Bank said: “This CPS has been prepared in the context of the World Bank’s renewed commitment to the twin goals of reducing extreme poverty and promoting shared prosperity in Nigeria and globally.

    “It is fully aligned with Nigeria’s development agenda, Vision 20: 2020, and its medium-term strategy for realizing that vision; the Transformation Agenda.”

    World Bank Country Director for Nigeria, Marie Francoise Marie-Nelly, noted: “The CPS seeks to address inequalities in income and opportunities for the poor and vulnerable by developing more effective mechanisms for social service delivery including social protection programs, education, health and water service delivery.”

    World Bank Task Team Leader for the CPS, Indira Konjhodzic, stated: “The bulk of the financing program will focus on increasing installed power generation and transmission capacity and improving the efficiency and governance of electricity delivery.

    “Boosting agricultural productivity, improving farmers’ linkages with agro-processors, and increasing access to finance including long time financing to the citizens particularly women is a major focus of this partnership strategy.”

    The Minister of Finance and Coordinating Minister of the Economy, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, commended the intervention.

    She said: “We believe that this CPS within the CAF of the development partners would go a long way to support the government of Nigeria’s efforts of creating jobs for our teeming youths and improving infrastructure that would lead to economic growth which would impact on the majority of our people.”

     

  • Old pension scheme under CPS begins

    Old pension scheme under CPS begins

    The newly established Pension Transitional Arrangement Department (PTAD) for the administration of public service pension under the old scheme has started operations, the National Pension Commission (PenCom) has said.

    The PTAD was established under the new Contributory Pension Scheme to continue to administer the affairs of existing pensioners in the old pension order, as stipulated in the Pension Reform Act, 2004.

    PenCom Acting Director General, Mrs Chinelo Anohu-Amazu who made this known to reporters, said the PTAD took off in November, last year.

    She said PenCom will supervise the Department, while the responsibilities, funds and assets of the relevant pension boards, or offices would be transferred and vested in the respective Departments.

    It is anticipated that the Departments shall cease to exist after the death of the last pensioner, she said, adding that the establishment of the Department was intended to address the lingering issues in the administration of pension in the public service.

    She said: “In order to address the lingering issues in the administration of pension in the public service, the Commission forwarded a proposal to the Federal Government seeking the approval for the establishment of a PTAD as provided for under Section 30 of the PRA 2004.

    “Already, a Director-General has been appointed for the PTAD in the person of Ms. Nellie Mayshak and the Head of Service of the Federation, has directed the directors of the Civil Service Pension Department, Police Pension Department and Customs, Immigration and Prisons Pension Department to report to the director-general of PTAD.”

    She explained that while all Boards of Trustees of pension schemes are being operated by parastatals, report to the director-general PTAD, the Act provides that PenCom supervises the PTAD.

  • CPS undersubscribed, says Premium Pension chief

    • Meets southwest retirees

    The Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) is still undersubscribed despite recording about N4 trillion from inception till date, the executive Director, Operations and Services, Premium Pension Limited, Kayode Akande, has said.

    Akande, who spoke at the Customer/Retiree Interactive Forum in some states of the Southwest region, said only about six million Nigerians have registered under the scheme out of about 60 million people that have one form of employment, or another.

    Notwithstanding this, he noted that the scheme is growing and assuming its pride of place in the socio-economic landscape of the country.

    He called on stakeholders to support the scheme, adding that it enables the long term investible funds to grow the economy.

    He described the new scheme as secure, and that the law that sets it up, which is also under review at the National assembly, has not left loopholes for corrupt practices.

    He noted that since the new scheme started almost a decade ago, there has not been cases of corruption and its objectives have almost been met without protest from pensioners.

    Speaking on the need to sensitise retirees and intending retirees on the scheme, Akande said the management of Premium Pension embarked on a tour to Ogun, Oyo and Osun states to assess the success and challenges of the company in particular, and the CPS in general.

    He said: “The tour is periodic and meant to show us how the retirees are doing in retirement after many years of service. The forum held in between the tour, also served to educate intending retirees on what they should do in the months leading to their final disengagement from work to facilitate the receipt of their gratuities and pension in good time.

    “Workers need to submit all the necessary documents and information to their Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) months before the date of their retirement to enable them to receive their pension and gratuity immediately after retirement.”

    Chairman, Board of Trustees, Association of Contributory Pensioners of Nigeria, Mr. Adesanya Agbomeji, who spoke during the tour, said the CPS was working, saying they have been receiving their gratuities and pension on time.

    A retiree, Rasaq Lawal, also said payment had been regular.

  • ‘The poor are not benefiting  from pension’

    ‘The poor are not benefiting from pension’

    The pension fund is now over N3.8 trillion, but it can become bigger, if the informal sector participates in the scheme, says Managing Director, AIICO Pension Manager Limited, Mr. Lounge Eguarekhide. He tells OMOBOLA TOLU-KUSIMO, in this interview, that the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) will be enhanced, if the government raises the pay of low income earners to enable them cover basic needs and still have something to save.

    How is the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) different from the old one?

    The Pension Reform Act (PRA) 2004 establishes the CPS for all Nigerian employees in the private and public sectors. The CPS is absolutely a revolution. I used this word very emphatically because if you look at how people accessed pension in this country under the former arrangement, the defined benefit scheme, you will discover it is, indeed, a revolution. Under the old scheme, government retirees or pensioners were paid pension on a specific calculation after retirement so they know what they will get but it was not well funded by the government. Most pension arrangements in the private sector were also not funded and so you would have pensioners waiting in long queues or there was no record of what their pension is. Most times, they cannot even access the pension because there is no money.

    With the current arrangement of the CPS where it is contributory, the pensioner pays a certain amount which is deducted from the pensioner’s account and it is marked by the employer. The total contribution required is a minimum of 15 per cent. The employer is expected to contribute minimum of 7.5 per centand the employee 7.5per cent. The employer could choose to contribute the entire 15 per cent or could choose to weigh the percentage contribution from the employee. But there is a contribution that happens every month and that contribution goes to a Pension Fund Administrator (PFA) of which AIICO is one. The PFA does not actually receive the money. It goes to a Pension Fund Custodian (PFC) who then informs the pension administrator that money has been contributed for its management by its contributor, and the pension manager goes and invests the money in approved investment areas or sectors. Now this shows that there is a separation of roles, the contributor appoints the PFA, the PFAs appoints its custodian and all of these activities are supervised by one regulator, PenCom. It wasn’t this way in the past.

    I would like to say that PenCom has done a very fantastic job since the inception of the PRA 2004 because we have had a structured contribution management, well supervised investment management, adequate regulation and to cap all that off is that you have a very organised process of the contributor accessing their benefit at the time the benefit becomes due. The contributor is notified by the PFA six months before retirement and is advised to prepare his or her document. Once these documents are prepared, the documents are sent for approval to PenCom at the point of retirement. This should not take more than two weeks if all the documents are intact and the retiree gets paid. The retiree gets paid every month and not later than the 24th of every month. There are no long queues because your money goes straight to your bank account. It is very organised and that is in my view, a revolution when you compare it to what it used to be.

    What does the 2013 Pension Reform Bill pending at the National Assembly seek to address and what is your take on it?

    My view on the pension reform bill is that there is no process that cannot be improved. We all have our imperfections as human beings and as long as we live on this earth, there will always be room for us to improve. One of the areas the bill seeks to address is a situation where the pension Act can be more far reaching.

    A good example is the current Act; the PRA 2004 which describes private sector contributors as employers that have a minimum of five employees. The Act says that you can join if you have three or less employees. They are trying to draw in participants in what is largely described as the informal sector.

    The regulator has also tried to see whether the percentage contribution from employer and employee can increase because many times people have said that the benefits are not lucrative for the retiree. But in my own view, that complaint is misplaced because if you had only eight years to accumulate your contributions, the benefit of compounding would be much less than if you have say 20 years.

    In my view, I think it is still early days and if people give it time, they will get more benefits. As manager of the funds, we will be able to invest more in instruments that will generate more improved return as time goes on. The bill also tries to address the transition arrangement between the old defined benefit scheme and the new one by putting all of those transitory departments directly under the supervision PenCom in a very active way. The bill is ambitious also by prescribing that states and local governments sign up to the CPS compulsorily. But I don’t think that is democratically practical and I don’t know how legal it is but I am also not a lawyer so I cannot really tell if it will work or not. The PRA 2004 is for the federal civil servants and those in the Federal Capital Territory as well as private sector organisations that have a minimum of five employees each. Now, the Bill describes the federal civil service in the FCT, private sector employers of minimum of three and also includes all states and local governments.

    There is an outcry from the employers as a result of the proposed increase in contributions in the new bill. What is your view on this?

    I think that we should take things slowly. If we have people contributing 15 per cent, 7.5 each and the compliance rate is at best 50-55 per cent if at all and you now try and increase the rate, what do you expect to happen? It will increase non-compliance. It has been expressed during the hearing on the reform at the National Assembly and most people are of the view that we should maintain the rate and just try and drive compliance. For employers who choose to go beyond the minimum 15 per cent, they can do collective bargaining and decide voluntarily to do a higher rate rather than make it compulsory and then make a lot of people fall under the non-compliance bar.

    Expectation is high among operators to get the informal sector on board just as PenCom gets set to release guidelines on it. What are your plans on the informal sector?

    I don’t think that the informal sector is a question of guidelines but a question of reality. I have said this to my management team and at a forum where it has been discussed with PenCom, listening. I have also expressed my views in writing. I think that our economy is very weak. People don’t get paid very good salaries. So just talking about the informal sector by using numbers would not work. The popular analysis is that there are 80 million workers and only five million have signed up while the remaining 75 million have not signed up. The way it works is that people will buy what they need and if they don’t need it you can’t force them to buy. The fact that you don’t have the so called 75 million people subscribed to pension arrangement means that it is either they are pressured, they do not have a need for it or they do not believe in it.

    In my view, more than 75 per cent of this 75 million earn subsistence income such that they can’t start a savings programme. It does not make any logical sense for somebody who earns N18,000 and has to pay rent and send his children to school to subscribe to a pension plan. I don’t think that we need to reinvent the wheel. I think that what we need to do is to drive compliance from the formal sector. There are a lot of things that need to be done for the informal sector to fully come on board. If you look at the Indonesian and Asian model, you will discover that they have driven compliance by incentivising the contributors that if an informal sector participant makes a contribution, the government matches it either 100 per cent or even 200 per cent. So if a vulcaniser manages to put up N2,000 as contribution to pension, the government matches it with say N2,000 and in some cases N4,000. So it is in my interest to find a way to contribute so that I can get access to a price. If that incentive is not there, there is no value for me because with the little money I earn, I have to take care of so many responsibilities. Until you actually improve incomes such that disposable income can cover basic needs and still leave something to spare, I think it is an illusion to think that the number of subscribers from the informal sector will grow. Now, that is speaking very broadly but if we narrow it down, I think that we can segment the informal sector in more details. I think we have many small organisations that do not fall under the CPS now. We have small businesses such as consultants, lawyers, accountants, little enterprises maybe tailors who are fairly organised. They have to find a reason to contribute to this. This is what we the operators are trying to figure out in association with PenCom.

    I think that the number that we will be looking at beyond what we have signed up on the informal side will not be more than another one or two million. That is on the private sector side.

    What is the level of compliance by the states?

    I think there is also a huge market, reasonably huge, we have about seven states, maximum of eight that have subscribed fully to the CPS. The other 28 have not subscribed so what is going to happen to them? Should they not? I think that if they do the numbers properly, they will find out they are short changing their workers if they do not subscribe because gradually your pension liabilities continues to grow and if you don’t fund your pension liabilities, one day the chicken will come home to roost. That is number one.

    Number two; it is an incentive for serious minded state to subscribe to the CPS because in states where they have subscribed to the pension, they found out that in trying to make provision for workers’ pension they will solve the problem also of ghost workers because you have to register to collect your pension and once you register, a ghost cannot have an account and access the pension. So in many cases where there have been registration and maybe one should not be saying this because all sort of things happen in the civil service but once you register under the CPS and payroll is organised such that you make payments to people who have registered, you find out that you have streamlined a lot of the waste in the system. People who are not registered on the payroll in truth are cut off and they have reduced the liabilities of ghost workers just by subscribing to the CPS. If you ask some of the states where the CPS have been embraced. They will tell you that it is an added benefit they have been able to get.

    What does PFA entail?

    I think that people do not have the clear understanding of what this business is. This business is a specialised assets management business but it is broader than an assets management business because we also have to do administration.

    There are lots of support services that you have to invest in and the income you get from managing pension is probably a two-line item. You get your management and administration fees. The business is a game of numbers and skill and until you achieve the minimum economic scale, it can be an absolute nightmare, but that is the reason Pencom introduced the minimum capital of N1 billion so that minimum quality standards can be met by licensed operators and I guess the hope was that if the minimum capital was increased, it will induce operators to combine their business as it made sense but most people have decided to increase their capital to see whether they can carry on and see what happens when contributors are allowed to transfer their account among PFAs because the smaller PFAs believe they can serve some contributors better than the larger PFAs that have a lot of customers and perhaps are not able to perform as far as service delivery is concerned. My experience is that there is often a flight to safety, a flight to size; a flight to more durable structure. I believe this is why the prescription for N1 billion naira recapitalisation by PenCom came up. There were 25 licensed PFAs but today we have 19 and it could shrink even further.

    Are there merger and acquisition talks among the existing 19 operators?

    People would combine their businesses if they find that it makes more sense to have stronger entities than to have control of smaller entities that are not able to deliver service.

    What are your limitations?

    I think that our biggest limitation is really the fact that the investment environment in the country is not right for some of the things you will like to do as a pension operator. It is important to note that pension money is not high risk money. It is money that you must have ready to pay the contributors when their time falls due and so you must invest it very carefully. You cannot take PenCom money to go and build the road that you have no idea how the money is going to come back. But we are human beings who live in an environment and would want to see the improvement of our environment and with pension fund money being long term money, the tendency is to think that it will be used to propel the infrastructural development but it has to be done in a very structured way. I think that as operators, we would like to see infrastructure bonds from government guaranteed for starters. This will make us to know that the user of the funds and the investors can get used to the processes that are required such that once we get more comfortable and we can see budgets coming off the table, we are encouraged to do more.

    The pension money is not supposed to go in one direction and not come back. There were certain projects which I will not want to mention right now that a lot of monies invested on and lost. That can easily happen to pension and these are the greatest challenges we find. As it is, we are limited to money market investment and largely Federal Government bonds. Fixed income is simply a factor of the environment in which we work. We would like to do a lot more creative investing in a secured way but we can only do that in an environment where contract is well respected and the objective is well understood. We want to do a lot real sector investing but the environment is not right for it right now. These are our limitations.

    What are your limitations in the capital market?

    My background is in stock broking, so if anybody would have an understanding of what goes on in the capital market, I would certainly be the one.

    Yes, there is an increased interest investing in the equities market. I think that this year, most pension fund administrators have increased their exposure to the equities market and you will see that the index dipped 47 per cent last year but you need to ask yourself: Where are the new companie? Where should we be investing our money? It comes back to the same real sector debate. We need to have new companies coming on the assembly line. That is how value is created. I started stock broking over 20 years ago and the companies leading the market are still the same Unilever, Nigerian Breweries or Nestle. We haven’t found new champions. Okay, maybe we have got a Dangote here but we need to find a lot of smaller companies that are growing, such that if you invest in the equities market, when it was small, you can grow with it as it matures. That is what happens in a capital market. Look at a company such as Apple, for instance where an investor bought Apple at a time when it was small and grew. That is what you invest money on. You don’t invest money just because you are passionate about a sector. You invest money because there is value to be created and it is that value that we are looking for. I think that it is early days, and what we need to understand in the financial services sector in this economy is that there is a process of development and until you are ready, don’t come out. The pension funds are accumulating and what this means is that people who have genuine projects and genuine development aspirations can have access to it. It means we are beginning to get a pool of long-term funds which can be accessed, but it must be accessed in a structured way for structured objectives.

    You put money in a venture,venture brings good return, the person who provided the money is happy, the person who set up venture goes on to something bigger, then creates employment and for us it is an added advantage because we create employment, we manage new pension accounts, so it is a virtuous circle but we have not gotten there yet. So, we have to proceed cautiously and it will take time. Let us look at the pension funds as being with us for beyond my life time, beyond your life time, beyond our children life time. It is a facility that is supposed to help this environment grow not only for infrastructure but to provide for people when they can no longer be actively engaged in employments along with other added advantage. It can also fund development.

    What are your projections for this year?

    I think that the processes are stable. The regulatory environment is still stable even though there’s been a transition in the executive management of pension commission. The pension industry has continued to grow from strength to strength. I think that the investment return is going to be a lot better this year than it has been over the last two to three years. Compliance has improved because PenCom has appointed recovery agents that have done some work in improving compliance to the CPS. For this year, I think we are going to see some of these consolidations but the distraction of elections would probably slow things down on the government side. So, we are not likely to see a lot of recruitment on the government side; rather hopefully with recovery in some of the sectors, particularly the new electricity management we have, we would see growth in pension account 2014.

     

     

  • For IG, DIGs, AIGs, CPs

    WHEN you use ‘demand’ or ‘advocate’ as a verb, do not add ‘for’, please!

    “The reason is because (that) our parties lack political ideologies.” (The PUNCH Back Page Salvo, January 20) This was contributed by Dr. Stanley Nduagu, Abia ANA President, 08062925996. Additionally from Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, New Edition: Do not say ‘the reason because’ something happens…but say the reason why that something happens. ‘By reason of something’ means because of something. An analysis, like the foregoing, brings out the technicality of language which puts off most readers! And from me: you can say ‘the reason why I came’ or ‘the reason I came’. Some books frown at the former, why most dictionaries approve it. That is grammaticality for you!

    From Mr. G.O. Komolafe, Ilesa (08037277985) comes the next excerpt: “Twice THE NATION ON SUNDAY COMMENT (EDITORIAL) of January 12 used ‘severally’ and it got the meaning wrong. Note that the word is not the adverb of ‘several’, but the opposite of ‘jointly’ or ‘collectively’.

    SATURDAY INDEPENDENT of January 18 goofed on five occasions: “230 perish in road crashes in Nasarawa” THE NATION ON SUNDAY of January 19 also committed this same atrocity apparently from the same news source: “230 killed in Nasarawa road crashes in 12 months” The victims were not killed, but died/perished…! Except in unusual circumstances, roads cannot crash when accidents happen. What crashes are vehicles—not roads! We can have road/rail/air/sea mishaps and respective contraptions could crash—not the means.

    “Back to school (Back-to-school) resolution”

    “Lagos official charged for (with) violating Tenancy Law”

    “Only agriculture can solve Nigeria’s unemployment problem” ‘Unemployment’ is a present and clear problem globally. Therefore, there is no need for redundancies!

    “Matches between the two teams in the past have (had) always live (lived) to expectations….”

    THE NATION ON SUNDAY of January 19 disseminated copious blunders: “Harmattan hampers voters turn out in Jigawa Local Govt (LG) election” No news: voter turnout

    “INEC reads riot act to staff” Fixed expression: the riot act—headline considerations should not vitiate stock entries.

    “It must have been distraction (distractions) galore”

    “This seems an insult, both on the spirit and letters of representative government.” (National Mirror Views Page, January 16) Get it right: the spirit of the law (in this case, representative government) There is nothing like ‘the spirit and letters of…’! The correct expression means intention: the meaning or qualities that someone intended something to have, especially the meaning that a law or rule was intended to have. ‘The letter of the law’, conversely, means the exact words of a law or agreement rather than the intended or general meaning. (Source: Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, New Edition)

    Still from Longman: Do not say ‘invitation letter’ or ‘complaint letter’. Say letter of invitation/complaint.

    “It is a common sight in most police units and stations to behold all manners of faulty equipment….” Not my opinion: all manner of equipment.

    “They will only end up frustrating the good intentions of the president, thereby continually subjecting Nigerians into (to) servitude.”

    “As popular as the two investigative panels he has put in place may appear, the power to investigate all issues are (is) vested in the respective legislative houses….”

    “Charges of corruption against those in authority is (are) not new to Nigerians.”

    “Although, personally, his integrity was never questioned, that of the members of his administration were (was) loudly condemned.”

    “So (a comma) with dwindling earnings, the Abubakar administration cannot (could not) be expected to maintain the same healthy foreign reserve as he inherited.”

    POLICE ETYMOLOGY

    NIGERIAN policemen are supposed to be friends of the society. Alas, their adversarial comportment reminds one of colonialism. Cops in other countries are very friendly and professional. On December 27, 2013, during my trip to Umuode en route to Aba, Abia State, a cop flagged me down just before Ore and asked for the tinted glass police permit for my Sport-Utility Vehicle (SUV). All explanations that I forgot it in my wife’s car when I took the SUV to my local mechanic for check-up preparatory to my South East trip fell on deaf ears! The presence of my wife and children did not make any emotional difference as the insolent and corrupt cop, Corporal Temitope Oluwasope (212039), standing and dangling a WW1 gun as if we were in a war situation proximal to their rickety operational vehicle numbered NPF 533B, insisted that I bribe him with N10,000 for contravening the law! There was no hint of taking us to the station for a statement and subsequent ticketing or making pretensions about dragging me to a kangaroo traffic court! It took the intervention of a senior officer and a gentleman before the extortionist and unruly constable could accept N2,000, which I reluctantly paid to foreclose further time wastage because of the tender children aboard and the long, bumpy trajectory ahead. Otherwise, I do not succumb to such circumstantially exploitative demands. Such extortive brazenness is the identity of Nigerian police nationwide! This kind of official (police) banditry should be limited to Lagos roads where it is a way of life for officers and men of the Lagos Police Command under the feeble and rudderless leadership of Umar Manko! The IGP, DIGs, AIGs and CPs should check the corrupt and beggarly language of their ‘boys’ while on illegal/outlawed (virtual roadblock) duty. Such foul communication hallmarks irredeemable institutional degeneracy.

  • Lagos holds pre-retirement seminar Thursday

    The Lagos State Pension Commission (LASPEC) is organising a pre-retirement seminar for about 1,200 workers, who will quit the service between January and June, this year, its Director-General, Lagos State Pension Commission, Mr. Rotimi Adekunle Hussain, has said.

    He said the event will take place at the Secretariat, Alausa on Thursday.

    According to him, the seminar organised in collaboration with the state’s approved Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and insurance firms, is to further broaden the knowledge of the worers on how to prepare for retirement and access their benefits under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS).

    He said: “The Pre-Retirement seminar programme is aimed at assisting retirees to adequately prepare for their physical, emotional and financial well-being in retirement as well as afford them the benefit of being in a better position and frame of mind to build a comfortable and rewarding life in retirement.”

     

  • ‘28 states yet to fully embrace CPS’

    ‘28 states yet to fully embrace CPS’

    Twenty-eight states are yet to fully adopt the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS), the Managing Director, AIICO Pension Managers Limited, Longe Eguarekhide has said.

    He told The Nation in Lagos that the benefits of the new scheme over the old one are enormous to both the states and the economy.

    He advised state governments in to comply with the scheme to solve the problem of ghost workers.

    He said there is a huge market yet to be tapped in the states that have not complied with the CPS.

    Eguarekhide reiterated that by subscribing to the CPS, both the states and retirees will enjoy some benefits, adding that it is an incentive for serious states to end ghost workers in civil service.

    He said: “Firstly, if they do their calculations properly, they will find out that they are short-changing their workers for not subscribing. This is because their pension liabilities will continue to grow graduallyand if they don’t fund their pension liabilities, they will continue to face problems with their retirees.

    “Secondly, while they are trying to make provision for their workers’pension, they will solve the problem of ghost workers. This is because a worker has to register under the CPS to collect his or her pension and the process will cut off any ghost worker in the system. The payroll is organised in such a way that you make payments to people who have registered.

    “With this, a lot of people who are not registered on the payroll would have been streamlined, thereby reducing the liabilities of ghost workers just by subscribing to the CPS. If you ask some of the states where the CPS have been embraced, you find out that that is an added benefit they have been able to get. At present, we have about eight states that have subscribed fully to the CPS while the remaining 28 have not subscribed to it.”

    The AIICO Pension boss further described the CPS under the Pension Reform Act, 2004 has a revolution when compared with the old pension scheme, the Defined Benefit Scheme.

    He said under the old scheme, government retirees or pensioners were paid based on a specific calculation after retirement and even though some pensioners knowhow much they will be paid, the scheme was not properly funded by the government and the private sector.

    “This led to pensioners’meeting in long queues and, sometimes, there is no record of their pension is or it’s difficult for them to access the pensionbecause there is no money to pay.

    “But the arrangement is contributory by both the employer and employee.There is a contribution that happens every month and that contribution goes to the Pension Fund Administration (PFA) which AIICO is one. The PFA does not actually receive the money. It goes to a Pension Fund Custodian (PFC), who then informs the pension administrator that money has been contributed for its management by its contributor, and then the pension fund goes and invests the money in approved investment areas or sectors. This further shows that there is a separation of rules in the scheme.”

    Eguarekhide added that the regulator, the National Pension Commission (PenCom) has been working since the inception of the PRA2004.

    He said there is structured contribution management, well supervised investment management, adequate regulation and an organised process of the contributor accessing their benefit at the time the benefit becomes due.

     

  • Avoid delay on CPS, SIGMA’s boss urges

    Workers and retirees under the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) should be versatile and avoid things that could delay their access to pension benefits, the Managing Director, Sigma Pensions Fund Administrator, Mr Umar Modibbo, has advised.

    Moddibo, who spoke in Lagos during the firm’s Customers/Retirees’ Forum on how to have easy access to their pensions, said there was the need to provide information on how to access their benefits as at when due.

    He said they should also have documentation requirements that will ensure easy and prompt payment of their entitlements, and payment options available under the Pension Reform Act 2004.

    While explaining those entitled to full or partial access to their Retirement Savings Account (RSA), he said that the retirement age differs from employer to employer.

    He said: “It depends on the employee’s terms and conditions of employment as the Pension Reform Act does not stipulate any particular age for retirement, but employees who retired by mandatory age (60 years) or years of service (35 years).

    “Though a retiree under this Scheme will have to attain the minimum age of 50 years to qualify and access his or her entitlement where an employee retires on medical grounds or incapacitation, he or she is entitled to full access irrespective of his or her age

    Speaking further, he noted that options available to every retired employee under the PRA 2004 are Programmed Withdrawal which is offered by the PFA and annuity plan to be purchased from an insurance company.

    The managing director said that all payments to be made have to be approved by the National Pension Commission and every payment is done to the bank account of the RSA holder or to the beneficiary of a deceased’s Eestate.

    For this purpose, he added that an accurate Nigeria Uniform Bank Account Number (NUBAN) account details are necessary to ensure hassle free payments.

    He pointed out that incomplete or inaccurate documentation could delay access to pension benefits such as where Letter of Administration details is not in agreement with payment details and pay slips not in agreement with retirement letter from the employer.

    He cited other reasons as delay in remittance of accrued rights and or outstanding contributions from the employer; Reconciliation issues such as incomplete remittances or over remittances from the employer; Inability to contact the customer or family as a result of missing or inaccurate contact details; Non agreement during negotiation on lump sum/ programmed withdrawal payment amounts; and discrepancies in documentation with initial information provided during registration.