Tag: pension

  • Pension convict  Yusuf granted bail

    Pension convict Yusuf granted bail

    Reprieve yesterday came the way of the pension convict, Mr. John Yakubu Yusuf.

    A Federal High Court, Abuja, granted him N10 million bail with one surety in like sum, who must not be below the rank of a director in the civil service.

    The surety who must be a resident in Abuja must show evidence of landed property with the title document submitted to the Chief Registrar of the court for authentication.

    The court also ordered Yusuf to deposit his international passport and that he cannot travel without the permission of the court.

    Ruling on the bail application yesterday, Justice Bello said: “I have carefully considered the application with due regards to the affidavit evidence.

    “It is clear that parties agreed in granting bail, the court must exercise its discretion judicially and judiciously”.

    Observing that the prosecution highlighted that Yusuf had been convicted of a similar crime by an Abuja High Court, the Judge said the two cases were different.

    According to him, the accused is presumed innocent in the present case since he pleaded not guilty to the charge.

    Justice Bello said he earlier remanded the accused in prison because of the uproar that greeted his earlier conviction and to keep him from the public glare for his safety.

    “Considering that investigation had been concluded and trial commenced in this case, I have decided to exercise discretion in his favour”, the Judge said before adjourning till Aprill 22 for trial.

    Yusufu, an Assistant Director in Police Pension Office was on January 28 sentenced to two year-jail by an Abuja High Court for conspiring to steal about N23.3 billion.

    He was, however, re-arrested and re-arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for false declaration of asset after he was given an option of fine by the court.

    Yusuf was rearraigned for willfully “failing to disclose his interest in a private company known as SY-A Global Services Limited, a company owned by him and immediate members of his family.

    The offence is punishable under Section 27(3) of the EFCC (Establishment) Act, CAP E1 2004.

    He was also accused of not declaring about N289 million in his fixed deposit accounts.

    He pleaded not guilty to the charge and was remanded in Kuje Prison by Justice Adamu Bello pending hearing and determination of his bail application.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

  • Pension operators target 20m contributors

    Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) are targeting at least 20 million contributors in the next four years through the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS), the President, Pension Fund Operators Association of Nigeria (PenOp), Dave Udeanu, has said.

    Udeanu said they would leverage on the integration of businesses in the informal sector to increase the number of contributors.

    He told The Nation that the operators are looking forward to boosting the figures from the current 5.5 million to 20 million by 2017.

    He said several additional incentives are being proposed to make the pension scheme more beneficial to persons working in the informal sector that account for over 60 per cent of the working population in the country.

    He disclosed that the National Pension Commission (PenCom) has released the the framework for the participation of persons operating in the informal sector, stressing that the draft is currently being finalised, adding that once the framework is released, it would ensure the participation of persons working in the informal sector and effectively increase the coverage of the scheme.

    PenCom, he said, will incorporate a multi-fund structure for Retirement Saving Accounts (RSA) funds into the amended investment guidelines before the end of the first quarter.

    “The decision to introduce the multi-fund structure in the first quarter of this year, is to allow enough time for public education and sensitisation by the commission and also allow operators enough time to be ready to implement the structure.

    “The multi-fund would be primarily differentiated by their overall exposure to variable income instruments and a contributor’s choice of funds may be limited based on the age of the contributor. Also the multi-fund structure would likely allow for the introduction of a non – interest or ethical fund,” he said.

    On the issue of misappropriation of pension contributions, the PenOp chief said the contributors in the CPS have nothing to worry about the safety of their retirement savings, assuring that the scheme is robust, safe and poised to help the retirees to live peacefully after their active employment years.

    Udeanu said the new pension scheme is a very simple antidote to the complexities of the old scheme and will ease the problems of retired workers going through hell to get their retirement benefits.

    Under the new scheme, fraud and delay in payment of benefits are almost non-existent due to structures and controls put in place for securing the funds and the fact that the accounts are always fully funded, he said.

     

     

  • Pension convict  Yusuf slumps in court

    Pension convict Yusuf slumps in court

    Tension convict, John Yakubu Yusuf; an Assistant Director in Police Pension Office, slumped in court yesterday at the hearing of his bail application.

    This forced Justice Adamu Bello to adjourn till April 22 to enable him get medical attention.

    Yusuf is being remanded in Kuje Prison.

    Earlier, his lawyer, Theodore Mayaki, applied for bail, pending the hearing and determination of the charge against him.

    But Prosecuting counsel, Rotimi Jacobs (SAN), urged the court to refuse the application, fearing that he will interfere with investigation.

    In a counter affidavit, Jacobs asked the court to take judicial notice that the accused had been convicted previously for criminal breach of trust and it will be in his interest to be kept in custody to prevent the possibility of him being mobbed by aggrieved members of the public.

    According to the prosecutor, Yusuf is most likely to jump bail considering that he will no longer be in the employment of the Federal Ministry of Works after the conclusion of the procedure to relieve him of his appointment.

    The court has fixed March 11 for ruling on the bail application.

    The accused sentenced to two year-jail by an Abuja High Court on January 28 for conspiring to steal about N23.3 billion.

    He was, however, re-arrested and re-arraigned by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) for false declaration of asset after he was given an option of fine by the court.

    Yusuf was rearraigned for willfully “failing to disclose his interest in a private company known as SY-A Global Services Limited, a company owned by him and immediate members of his family.

    The offence is punishable under Section 27(3) of the EFCC (Establishment) Act, CAP E1 2004.

    He was also accused of not declaring about N289 million in his fixed deposit accounts.

    The accused pleaded not guilty to the charge and was remanded in Kuje Prison by Justice Adamu Bello pending hearing and determination of his bail application.

    In count one: Yusuf was accused of willfully “failing to disclose his interest in a private company known as SY-A Global Services Limited, a company owned by him and immediate members of his family.

    The offence is punishable under section 27(3) of the EFCC (Establishment) Act, CAP E1 2004.

    Count two: “That you John Yakubu Yusufu on or about 14th February 2012 at Abuja, in the Abuja Judicial Division knowingly failed to make full disclosure of your assets and liability in the Declaration of Assets Form filled by you, by not declaring your interest in the N250 million you lodged in a fixed deposit account with the Zenith Bank in the name of SY-A Global Services Limited, a company in which you are the sole signatory to its account and you thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 27(3) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment, etc.) Act, CAP E1 2004″.

    Count three: “That you John Yakubu Yusufu on or about 14th February 2012 at Abuja, in the Abuja Judicial Division knowingly failed to make full disclosure of your assets and liability in the Declaration of Assets Form filled by you, by not declaring your interest in the sum of N10 million you lodged in a fixed deposit account with the First Bank of Nigeria Plc in the name of SY-A Global Services Limited, a company in which you are the sole signatory to its account and you thereby committed an offence punishable under Section 27(3) of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (Establishment, etc.) Act, CAP E1 2004″.

     

  • Oyo N1.6b pension fraud: 10 persons remanded in prison

    An Ibadan Magistrate’s Court yesterday remanded 10 persons in Agodi Prisons for allegedly defrauding the Oyo State Government of N1.6 billion.

    The money belonged to the State Local Government Pension Board.

    The accused are Hakeem Muili, Alhaja Iyabo Giwa, Adeduntan Johnson, Oguntayo Banji, Adesina Jimoh, Johnson Bosede, Adebiyi Olasumbo, Kareem Rasheed, Muili Adedamola and Salewa Adedeji.

    They were charged with conspiracy to steal, abuse of office and stealing of local government staff pension fund.

    All the accused pleaded not guilty.

    They were granted N2 million bail each with two sureties in like sum.

    Each surety is to have a Certificate of Local Government Origin or landed property within the court’s jurisdiction or an account with a reputable bank in Oyo state or Certificate of Business Registration.

    The accused were remanded at Agodi Prisons when they could not meet the bail conditions.

    The Chief Magistrate, Mrs. Tijani Durosaro, adjourned the case till March 19.

    The state government discovered the fraud last August and invited the police to look into it.

    Chairman of the Board and the Local Government Service Commission Chief Lasisi Ayankojo said the fraud was responsible for the delay in the payment of the pension of retired teachers.

     

  • FG initiates disciplinary action against Maina

    FG initiates disciplinary action against Maina

     

    The Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Alhaji Bello Sali, has directed the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Interior, to initiate disciplinary action against the Chairman of Pension Reform Task Team, Mr. Abdulrasheed Maina.

    The directive is contained in a statement issued in Abuja on Friday by the Director of Press and Public Relations, Office of the Head of Civil Service of the Federation, Mr. Tope Ajakaiye.

    The statement said the action followed the submission of a report from the Inspector-General of Police to Mr. President on the inability of the Nigeria Police to locate Maina.

    “It has become apparent that he has absconded from duty without leave. This carries severe penalty in line with Public Service Rules No. 030301 – 030304,” it said.

    The News Agency of Nigeria recalls that Maina was declared wanted on February 1 by the police following his failure to appear before the Senate Joint Committee on the Investigation of Pension Funds.

    The Senate had also accused the Presidency of shielding Maina from appearing before it, a claim the latter has refuted.

    The Special Adviser to the President on Media and Publicity, Mr. Reuben Abati, said the Presidency was not backing Maina against the Senate and added that the lawmakers could summon anyone they wished.

    Abati said complaints should be sent to the Office of the Head of Service of the Federation since Maina was a civil servant.

    Maina is an Assistant Director in the Customs, Immigration and Prisons Pension Office (CIPPO), an agency under the Interior Ministry.

  • Justice Talba and the pension thief

    Justice Talba and the pension thief

    If anyone had doubts that Nigeria was yet to start any serious anti-corruption war, the judgment handed down to a director of the Police Pension Office, Mr. John Yusuf, by Justice Abubakar Talba of the Federal Capital Territory High Court, Abuja, on January 28, was enough to erase that doubt. Yusuf’s case had been a celebrated one, given the magnitude of the amount allegedly stolen by the pension thieves in the Police Pension Office, and the fact that he was the first person to be tried for the police pension fraud. About N38.8billion was alleged to have been stolen. However, Yusuf and his ilk were said to have stolen N27.2billion of the amount. Indeed, Yusuf personally admitted to stealing N2billion. For this, the best Justice Talba could do was to ask the big thief to refund N325million, forfeit 32 houses and pay a fine of N750,000 or spend two years behind bars.

    It is unusual for people to engage in loud discussion in the courtroom, but in this case, people in the court, engaged in loud exchanges, loud enough for the court clerk to call everybody to order when Justice Talba pronounced his judgment. Obviously, Yusuf had stolen more than enough for the owner to notice; and Justice Talba too had shown a kind of uncommon compassion. Where did he expect the owners of the funds to get their money at retirement if this is the kind of kid gloves that judges in Nigeria would be treating people like Yusuf? Did it ever occur to Justice Talba that he too could be a victim of the Yusufs of this world upon his retirement?

    Quite annoyingly, the pension thief immediately paid the peanut of a fine, to the admiration and applause of his friends and family members, and headed for home. No shame; no remorse. I wonder what Yusuf would tell his children and grandchildren, if he is already a grandfather. Will he tell them that he just paid a fine instead of going to jail for stealing other people’s sweat? Do you know that in the kind of Nigeria where we now live, Yusuf would have organised an elaborate party to mark his victory over the country’s rotten system if the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) had not rearrested him to face trial, this time, for allegedly not declaring some assets, among other allegations, including, again, theft? Some people might even take space in the media to felicitate with their own who was lucky to escape imprisonment for stealing. That is how sunk we are as a nation. This country is indeed in trouble if this is the way we want to fight corruption. I wonder how our leaders feel in the company of other countries’ leaders when matters like this crop up in the comity of nations.

    But I am happy that, for once, many Nigerians were enraged by the judgment. They must have been wondering why Justice Talba did not emulate Jesus Christ by simply telling the accused to ‘go but sin no more’. I am happy that, Nigerians protested the judgment; and particularly so that students and other youths were in the vanguard of the protest. It is rightly so because it is their parents’ future, and by extension their own future, that the Yusufs of this world are eating up today. With the kind of judgment handed down to Yusuf, we have every cause to be apprehensive of the pension savings. Rather than serve as deterrent, it will serve as stimulus for other pension and allied thieves. All they have to do is to steal big enough.

    That was why I laughed when last Monday, Justice Okon Abang ruled (in a matter between Capital Oil and Gas Ltd and its managing director, Mr. Ifeanyi Ubah, and Access Bank Plc and Coscharis Motors, over a N10billion loan the bank claimed to have given Capital Oil and Gas Ltd.), that Access Bank must withdraw its suit on the same matter in a London court. With rulings such as the one by Justice Talba, one does not need any expert advice that if one could afford it, he should not leave such matters in the hands of the unpredictable Nigerian judiciary. At any rate, I wonder why Justice Abang should be so concerned about whether someone has confidence in the Nigerian Judiciary or not; what, to me, should be his uppermost concern is that justice is done, no matter from where; whether home or from abroad. In any case, don’t Nigerian rich people leave our hospitals for hospitals abroad for the same reason that they do not have confidence in the country’s hospitals? Why couldn’t the minister of health or even the president protest this by decreeing a stop to it? The point that Justice Abang seems not to know is that confidence or trust are priced words that cannot be decreed or imposed; both are earned. It does not seem to me that anyone can force another person to have confidence in what he or she has a choice not to have confidence in. l leave the matter at that for now.

    But, meanwhile, to underscore how ridiculous the Yusuf sentence was, Justice Mashood Abass of the Oyo State High Court, Ibadan, just the day after Justice Talba’s judgment, sentenced the Provost of the Federal Cooperative College, Ibadan, Mrs Ruth Aweto, and the bursar, Mr Adekanye Komolafe, to four years imprisonment for deceiving the Federal Government by passing off 41 casual staff of the college as permanent staff, with annual emolument of about N7million, instead of N3.6million. They thereby made a dubious gain of N3.4million over one year. They had no option of fine. Their crime must have been that they are ‘petty thieves’.

    I do not know of a place where people set a date for revolution; it builds up over years only for the bubble to burst when the people run out of patience. The spontaneous reaction of Nigerians to the verdict tells me that there is still hope for this country. All we need is to sustain such protest whenever strange things like this happen.

    I know President Goodluck Jonathan has hardly seized any great moments. But he can take advantage of this because, to do otherwise would confirm the notion that the government itself is handicapped when it is anti-corruption because its hands too are not clean. The President may be saying this is the problem of the judiciary; but the buck stops at his desk. There is nothing that says he cannot initiate a genuine judicial reform that will take care of the inadequacies of our present laws which make it easy for big thieves to escape justice while poor ones get all the punishment. Anything can happen in a situation where people lose confidence in the judiciary, which is the last hope of the common man. All the arguments advanced by Yusuf’s counsel that made Justice Talba to have compassion (I hope it is compassion) on the accused pale into insignificance when juxtaposed with the sufferings that the owners of the pension being stolen and their dependants would face when the time to reap the fruits of their labour comes and there is no money forthcoming. Even Kootu Ashipa of old (Ashipa’s Court) would have done better, if only to prove to the world that the country’s anti-corruption war is not a huge racket or, sorry, a huge joke.

  • PenCom unveils guidelines for state pension bonds

    THE National Pension Commission (PenCom) has introduced new requirements for states wishing to access pension funds for investing in state bonds.

    According to the Commission, such a state must first enact a law to establish the Contributory Pension Scheme, which must give its contributions the same priority as salaries.

    The law should also address every inconsistency observed by the National Pension Commission in its review.

    In a circular signed by the General Manager, Public Sector Pensions, Mrs G. E. Usoro, it said such a state must establish a state pension board and a local government pension bureau to coordinate the implementation of the contributory pension scheme and other related matters in the state.

    Besides, the state should open retirement savings accounts with PFAs for employees that in the Pension Scheme in the state, and ”fully remit both employer and employee pension contributions into the employees’RSAs for a minimum of six consecutive months from the date of commencement of the scheme in the state’’.

    The Commission’s new position also indicated that such a state must “secure a group life insurance cover that guarantees a minimum of 300 per cent of the yearly total emolument of the employees covered by the Contributory Pension Scheme.”

    PENCOM’s requirement said the insurance companies engaged for this purpose must be eligible life insurance firms, licensed by the National Insurance Commission (NAICOM) and duly certified by the National Pension Commission as being compliant with the provisions of the Pension Reform Act 2004.

    Other requirements, according to the circular, are that states wishing to access the pension funds: “Must have consistently funded the Retirement Benefits Bond Redemption Fund Account, with the Central Bank of Nigeria, or any PFA from the date of commencement of remittance of pension contributions by the state.

    “Must execute an Irrevocable Standing Payment Order (ISPO), to mandate the Accountant-General of the Federation (AGF) to deduct at source and remit monthly pension contributions from the state’s share of the Federation Account Allocation to the state, in line with the guidelines of the Commission.”

  • Pension: We leave Maina to God – Senate panelists

    Pension: We leave Maina to God – Senate panelists

    The Senate Committee probing the management of pension funds on Wednesday adjourned its sitting indefinitely.

    Chairman of the committee, Senator Aloysius Etok, who announced the indefinite adjournment of the committee, blamed the measure on the frustration members of the committee have suffered due to the continued absence of the Chairman, Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), Dr. Abdulrasheed Maina.

    But while members of the Senate committee were waiting for Maina, the PRTT boss was said to be busy addressing his supporters who stormed the National Assembly gate in their numbers.

    Apart from Maina’s supporters who carried various forms of placards, another group also protested the continued stay of Maina as PRTT boss.

    It was very difficult for Senators and House of Representatives members to gain access into the National Assembly Complex due to the large number of protesters.

    Some of the lawmakers made a decoy to follow the Aso Rock Villa gate to enter the National Assembly.

    While some of the protesters shouted the praises of Maina and asked the Senate to leave him alone, others demanded the immediate removal of Maina as chairman of PRTT.

    Some of the placards read: Leave Maina alone, Maina is a good man, Maina has saved pensioners, Maina has done what nobody could before him, the Senate committee has been bought over by pension thieves.

    Etok, who could not hide his anger over Maina’s alleged disrespect for his committee complained that even the Inspector- General of Police who was mandated to bring him to the National Assembly failed to comply with the order.

    He said, “We have been here and believing that we want to give the Acting Director of Customs, Immigration and Prison Pension Office (CIPPO), Abdulrasheed Maina fair hearing.

    “Because we have been sitting and adjourning for the sake of making sure he is here so that we can give him fair hearing because in the other pension public hearing he said he did not have fair hearing.

    “Today we have been here and we have kept these people waiting for one hour and incidentally the Inspector General of Police is not here.

    “The Senate under the leadership of the Senate President issued a warrant of arrest and directed the IGP to present and compel Maina’s appearance before this committee by 12 O’clock today.

    “We have been waiting here for more than one hour and we have not seen him.

    “Today we are not going to waste your time and since we have promised we want to make sure we give him fair hearing.

    “After due consultation with members of this committee, we have decided to adjourn this sitting indefinitely.”

    The Co- Chairman of the committee, Senator Kabiru Gaya, also expressed frustration.

    Gaya said, “I have information from the police that Maina is at the gate addressing his supporters instead of coming here.

    “We wanted him to be here. So the committee will decide what to do.

    “One thing is that we have been honest and sincere. We want to put it on record. God knows we have tried. We leave him to God.”

     

  • Pension ‘godfathers’ behind Maina, says Etok

    The Chairman of the Joint Senate Committee on Establishment, Pubic Service and Local Governments, Senator Aloysius Etok, yesterday said the Chairman of the Pension Reform Task Team (PRTT), Abdulrasheed Maina, was being goaded by godfathers.

    Etok told reporters in Abuja that the committee investigating pension fund administration in the country has discovered that the cabal involved in pension fraud is more than the oil cabal.

    He said: “In the performance of this pension probe, I realised I have stepped on very powerful toes; and I can tell you that pension cabal is worse than oil cabal because in pension, many people are involved.

    “It has taken such a long time of operation that when you are touching one, you don’t know the linkages because, pension fraud kingpin does not go to collect all the monies himself. He has a number of fake names he has put in.”

    Etok lamented that Maina was running from pillar to post instead of helping the committee to recover stolen funds.

    He said: “I can tell you on behalf of the committee that we have never compromised and we will never do so.

    “We are not biased. To say we have colluded with pension thieves is a mere concoction to distract us. Why didn’t he say this before now?

    “We have assured him of fair hearing. You can imagine the level of punishment an individual has unleashed on thousands of pensioners, but he goes around using the media to lie to the public.

    “I suspect he has godfathers backing him because, ordinarily, no Nigerian will be so arrogant and exhibit such level of exuberance: not minding the laws of the land or the civil service rules.

    “He has to mention the pension thieves. We have been fair-minded and transparent. We sought data from the Accountant-General of the Federation on the exact funds released.

     

  • Pension assets available to finance infrastructure

    Pension assets available to finance infrastructure

    As he prepares to exit PENCOM, the Director-General Muhammad Kabir Ahmad spoke to a select group of journalists including Nduka Chiejina (Assistant Editor) on the PenCom scheme. He said it is an improvement on the previous one and is designed to encourage savings. Excerpts

     

    After eight years of the contributorypension scheme administration inNigeria, what are the prospects and challenges?

    Basically, we started an industry that never existed. There are three issues that we need to focus on. One, we had a pension reform that had intended to establish a scheme that is fully funded and to be privately managed in a more efficient manner. A scheme that was also to replace other old schemes, particularly at the federal level so that we can have a more transparent scheme. The reform also provided that it should be managed by regulated entities, but beyond that, should be regulated and supervised by the government agency called the National Pension Commission.

    Today, we have the National Pension Commission, some of us have been associated with the scheme from the beginning and, hopefully, by the end of December, we are exiting and new people would take over from us.

    We have a regulatory and supervising institution that is charged with regulating and supervising pension activities, whether at the state, federal or in the private sector. Pension assets have been accumulated over a period of time. We do have an industry and quite a few states have also complied with that.

    We have also been able to license and regulate operators, like asset managers and custodian. In a nutshell, these are the things that we have been able to do.

    Have there been challenges?

    There are challenges. As an industry and precisely as a regulator, we decided to focus on educating and enlightening Nigerians to secure their acceptance of the scheme, because if they buy-in, you will have a voluntary compliance. They know what you are doing, they know the benefit and so they will voluntarily comply.

    The next issue is compliance. Private sector compliance. Do they get their employees registered? Are they contributing? For the formal sector, majority are complying, either they have got their staff registered and are paying regularly, or at least their staff are registered and the payments are not regular.

    But the bulk of employers are actually in the informal sector, given the fact that we are looking at employment of five people. Now, how do you capture that group? Historically, an economy like Nigeria’s managing the informal sector is the most challenging, whether you are looking at a tax issue or compliance issue.

    The reason is that you don’t have a structure as per what the informal sector is all about. Businesses are not properly registered. Today, you cannot go to any agency or office in this country where you can pick a list of active registered businesses or employers of labour.

    Recently, SMEDAN and I think the National Bureau of Statistics did some survey on employers that employee three to five workers and hey came to a figure of about 14 million and if you multiply it by three that gives you a rough situation of what the employment situation is. The challenge is how do you get the data and how do you structure issue of getting the benefits paid.

    What is the way out?

    We needed to have a separate structure of how payment of pension could be done and how PFAs can go and get money. We are developing a regulation on regulatory framework for the informal sector where we believe the bulk of our employees are. We also want to link it up with an important elements of pension reform that has not been implemented, that is the mini pension guarantee.

    How?

    The intention of the mini-pension guarantee is to encourage saving. We are still working on the structure and we hope it will be incentive for people to save. If I started saving, let’s say N100 every month and at the end of 20 years, my pension is not up to N18,000, then the government would have to pay the difference so that I can have something to fall on.

    The third issue has to do with the states. The states are supposed to establish their own pension schemes. Lagos is the flagship; they have a very effective contributory pension scheme. We have about 21 states that are in different stages of compliance, but unfortunately, the compliance is a bit slow and haphazard.

    The old scheme is under probe because of corruption. People are scared that the new scheme may go the old way. What are the striking differences between the old and the new scheme, and what have you put in place to ensure that the new scheme does not go the old way?

    At the federal level, prior to 2004, we have what we called, the defined benefit-Pay As You Go. In other words, the Federal Government never set aside money for the payment of pension. On an annual basis, it had an estimate, X number of people would be retiring, let’s pay pension. Funds were not been made available, that is one reason.

    The second reason is that it was a defined benefit based on final salary. Come rain come shine, the employer has agreed that when he/she retires, I am going to get 80 per cent of my salary for the rest of my life. This is how it was structured, but it was not funded. Beyond that was that pension departments were established, where the government paid money to them to pay pensioners. They placed the money in the banks, what happened and what is still happening is what brought about the Senate public hearing.

    The Federal Government disburses money to the pension departments, they open bank accounts, keep the money in the banks in a fixed deposit accounts, as a result of which people who are retired are not put in the payroll. Those on the payroll, their names are on-and-off. Every year, there is a verification exercise, the administration was not transparent. It was cumbersome. You have to come to Abuja for the verification.

    It appeared that those in charge of the pension administration took advantage of the internal weakness the offices created. At the end of the day, you have the government making payment and somebody in between is getting the benefit.

    On the other hand, the contributory pension scheme ensures that it is fully funded. In other words, funds must be set aside on a monthly basis. You don’t need to wait for budgetary allocation.

    Two, an employee must open a retirement savings account where his collection is paid into. It is an account owned by an individual that can be traced. If somebody touches that account, there  are appropriate sanctions that can be taken. The money is privately managed by licensed institutions that are regulated by the National Pension Commission with specific rules and regulations. They are monitored and supervised and, therefore, you can easily challenge them.

    Beyond that is the fact that you have two institutions- the administrators and the custodians. The administrator that manages the fund does not have access to the fund.

    Clearly, there is separation of duties and even in the event that there is hiccup. Whatever happens to the fund, the shareholders of the custodian is oblique to make good whatever fund that might have been lost, either as a result of fund trapped in any of he banks or financial institutions.

    It is impossible that what happened under the old scheme would happen in the new contributory scheme. That is why, today, we have not heard of any incidence that the funds have been diverted. It is very difficult.

    This funds are invested in diversified portfolio. It may be treasury bills, bonds, equity and so many other instruments. It is not as if the funds are kept in a vault of the pension board.

    How has it been administered so far?

    The people retiring under the new scheme started retiring in July 2007. Basically, five years. In the last five years, as at September this year, 54,000 contributors have retired, and close to N150 billion have been paid as lump sum to those in the public and the private sectors that have contributed.

    However, there is also another challenge. The challenge is that those who have retired under the federal and the state government, we have a period that arrears were due for, towards the end of last year to the middle of this year. Section 29 of the Pension Reform Act provides that the Federal Government should be setting aside five per cent of its bill into a Pension Fund Account, to be managed by the Central Bank of Nigeria for redeeming such liability for those who are retiring under the new scheme.

    But the five per cent was not been paid. The reason being that appropriate appropriation was made by the budget office, but it took us a long time to convince the National Assembly that this was a statutory requirement. Up till the middle of 2011, and in that intervening period, we had a large number of people that have retired, either as a result of tenure system, and it was not anticipated.

    It was not part of the five per cent, or people that voluntarily retired or deceased employees.

    How are you addressing that?

    National Pension Commission encourages employees to come and register so that we can calculate their liability and advise the government one year in advance. Those who are retiring in 2013, we have already captured and advised the government how much will be required. Until recently, employees don’t want to do that.

    But since the records are there, why can’t the PfAs do the update, get the data from the organisations and pay the retirees?

    Let me tell you how it works. The PFAs write to all the prospective employees, six months in advance. Majority do not care to respond. Some will say they have not seen the letters, or were busy tidying up. It is only the employees that can provide those documents.

    For us, six months is enough to provide these documents and the benefits are processed in advance. We don’t have that problem with the private sector, it is the civil servants at the federal level, who normally do not think the process is relevant, but it fast-tracks the process, that is our concern.

    A pensioner lamented that after the lump sum is paid, what he takes home every month is very little to take care of his family. Another one complained that he retired at the same level with his colleague but his colleague was in the old scheme but earns better pension than who that operates the new scheme. He also raised another issue about increase in salary, saying whenever there is an increase in salary, it affects the take-home of pensioners but it is not the case with the new scheme. There is also this issue that says after 20 years, you must have finished your fund; after that what happens to the pensioner?

    Let me take the three issues one after the other. They are two different schemes. The defined benefit Pay As You Go Scheme is the final salary scheme. In other words, when you retire you get 80 per cent as your pension for life. I can tell you it is one of the most generous in the world.

    Except for Saudi Arabia that has a 100 per cent, Netherlands has about 105 per cent, most African countries have under 40 percent, or what they call replacement ratio. Most emerging economies have under 40 per cent. 40 per cent is the ILO Convention.

    There are two things, you either have your money now, or you assume that somebody is going to give you money. The group of people you are looking at, are those who work for the Federal Government. The private sector does not have that because they do not have the money to support such a generous scheme. The point is that in this new scheme, you will have your money, the money is there. The other schemes are dependent on budgetary allocation, which may and may not come.

    Obviously, it is lower in the new scheme than in the old scheme, because the new scheme is about sustainability. The cohorts of those who would be retiring  in the next 10 years, perhaps from 2007, their pension will be low, but those who have time to save, I can tell you that by the end of the day, they are going to accumulate more money than those under the old scheme because they have longer time to save.

    How are the assets invested, where and at what ratio?

    Investment management is the most critical aspect of the contributory pension scheme. We contributed over a period and, therefore, the returns on investment is supposed to go into our savings. What we do is to ensure that the investments are managed in a more transparent manner.

    What we did was to issue an investment regulation. Generally, there are two options. You either allow the investment manager to decide because he is a professional, a very transparent person, he can take a decision on your behalf. Most developed countries have that because they have a more transparent process.

    The other option is a restrictive regulation, clearly defined bucket. These are the areas for you to invest in and these are the requirements. There must be rating, performance-based mark and there is also the limit. You cannot invest more than X  per cent of your portfolio in a particular class of asset, or in a group of assets.

    The last time we did a comprehensive work was in December 2010. What we did was to see how you diversify investment instruments. As at today, there are basically three instruments where pension assets are invested. Federal Government Bonds, which takes about 60 per cent. It came down from about 80 per cent. Interbank placement, money market instruments and then the equity market. For money market, I think it has dropped to about 14 per cent and for equity, it is about 12 per cent.

    The reason you have substantial portion of the asset being invested in Federal Government Bond is because they are sovereign risk and they offer the highest yield.

    Of recent the states are coming to the capital market to raise bonds, but we have requirements. For pension assets to be invested in state bond, the state must be in compliance with the contributory pension scheme and that has assisted us in getting quite a few of them to come on board and to join the new scheme. We hope that will encourage others to do the same.

    As at today, we have about N3 trillion pension that have been contributed. The growth rate per annum is about 30 per cent annual growth of pension asset. Hopefully, in the next five years, you can estimate what that means. It is a gradual process and it has been consistent so far. The private sector have been contributing significantly to that.

    Some people don’t know how their contributions are invested; again, can you throw more light on the issue of minimum pension guarantee?

    As at today, what the contributors have is what is called the Retirement Savings Account statement on a quarterly basis. You can have a hard copy, some PFAs can give you access to their website so that you can see your balance 24 hours seven days. That gives you an idea how much has been contributed by you, by your employer and what returns are earned over a period and you get an alert on that. But by the time we create these funds, you now choose where you want your funds to be invested.

    On pension guarantee, what is it is saying is that there are people, particularly, small workers who may not contribute enough. Or migrant workers who have worked for six months, rationalised and moved to another company the following year, and within the interval I saved and that savings will not accumulate huge amount over a period. For that reason, what the guarantee is saying is that for those of us who have saved for a minimum number of years, when they are retiring, the pension they will take is minimal, it is an incentive for people to come on board. The challenges we have today in our society is: who will bear that cost. Could it be part of social security? But someone at the age of 60 needs to be taken care of. At least, let him have a minimum wage. It is a conditional grant that you are supporting an individual who has made an effort. In the long run, national savings promote economic development and for every country to succeed, it must have national savings. The idea is to assure somebody that at the end of the day, there is something for you and this will encourage even those who are not saving to join. The benefit for the government is that large funds are been made available and instead of borrowing from banks, the government can borrow and invest in infrastructure. Worldwide pension assets constitutes an average of about 100 per cent of the GDP in most countries. They rely on pension and insurance assets for growth and development and not on bank assets. That is what we hope the pension reform will promote.

    What is your response to the debate that pension asset should be provided to develop infrastructure in the country?

    That is what pension assets should do because pension assets are long term assets and they should finance long term assets. Because they finance long term liabilities, they are available. However, there must be clearly defined rules and regulations. There must be clearly defined terms. Exit terms that those investments are secured.

    In a country where you borrow from outside to finance projects when you have pension assets lying, how far have you gone with your offshore investment? How far about marginal players? What would you like to be remembered for and what would you call your major challenge?

    We believe the ICRC needs to play a greater role. MDAs should be able to work with the ICRC to come out with clearly identified long term projects that long term funds can be invested in, that is the starting point. Concessionaires should also come out with a real starter process. Should we continue to finance infrastructure from the budget when we have private sector? I don’t think so. There is this debate that make the bride beautiful before you offer it to the groom, is that the argument? If an activity can be financed by the private sector, give it to the private sector to finance. Why don’t we have all the enabling environment for them to finance that. As a country, we need to agree on that. If we do that then we don’t need to borrow to finance infrastructure.

    The last time we interacted with the media, we said there are two PFAs that have not complied. The IGI and Citi. IGI has indicated their interest to comply. To the two of them we issued notice to the board. Our law says that you must give notice for revocation. You can’t revoke immediately and the notice is 28 days, which means you are given the opportunity to meet up. Most likely, for IGI when our board meets we may take a decision and ask them to return the licence, because they are prepared to do that. They have the funds and they say they are going to do that. Unfortunately with the Citi Trust, they decided to take us to court, we are in court with them. As at today, you could say we have 21 PFAs, plus IGI.

    Do we expect more of them to have merged? Yes. We raised their minimum capital from N150 million to N1 billion. The argument was that is the N1 billion not too small? Of cause not! They are asset managers and don’t need huge capital. They don’t take credit risk. But they needed capital for expansion to provide effective services to the public. We have been discussing with them. We encourage mergers and acquisition. What we are saying is that the more accounts you have, the better you are generating resources to manage your business. We say, for instance, if after 90 days, there is shortfall in this N1 billion capital, we can withdraw the license. It is a huge task, especially for some of the marginal players for them to maintain that N1 billion continuously. We will continue to encourage them through moral suasion. It is better to operate in a bigger environment and get more reliable returns than to be a managing. In most countries, Chile, Mexico started with a large number but over the years ended up curtly with six or seven. Some people say no you will create an oligarchy. The bottom line is that the stronger they are, the better.

    What the law provides for offshore investment is that no pension assets can be invested abroad except with the approval of the president and in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Central Bank of Nigeria. Let me tell you why we have been reluctant. One, we needed long term funds to be invested in infrastructure. Domestically, we need funds, and encouraging funds to be taken outside would not be in best interest. The second issue is that our operators and us need to understand investment instruments. Thirdly, we needed to build confidence. We don’t want contributors to start saying we contributed and PFAs take my money abroad. We needed that confidence that Nigerians would trust PFAs, will trust PenCom. In the intervening period, what we did was to say that for private equity fund to provide only five per cent, the funds they generate they can invest 75 per cent locally and invest 25 per cent abroad. The reason is that most of them have cross border establishments. Also, PE funds are usually provided by outsiders.