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‘Pension fund will help alleviate plight of Nigerians’

By Editorial board
25 May 2015   |   2:56 am
THE Director General of the National Pension Commission (PenCom), Mrs. Chinelo Anohu-Amazu, has said the pension industry would play a vital role in alleviating the sufferings that Nigerians would likely experience should the Federal Government introduce some forms belt-tightening measures to salvage the economy.
Photo: ncsl
Photo: ncsl

THE Director General of the National Pension Commission (PenCom), Mrs. Chinelo Anohu-Amazu, has said the pension industry would play a vital role in alleviating the sufferings that Nigerians would likely experience should the Federal Government introduce some forms belt-tightening measures to salvage the economy.

She also assured contributors under the scheme that they would soon be given the opportunity to use part of their pension savings as equity contribution towards building their own homes.

Anohu-Amazu gave this assurance at the one-day “Stakeholders’ Sensitisation Conference on the Pension Reform Act, 2014” in Abuja yesterday.

Fielding a question on how the pension industry would help to alleviate the sufferings that Nigerians would face in the likelihood that the Federal Government introduces belt-tightening measures going forward, she said the industry would play its role creditably.

According to her, the pension industry has pooled significant investible funds locally and would deploy same to relevant sectors of the economy, particularly for the development of infrastructure and provision of houses for contributors in line with relevant provisions of the pension law.

She recalled that the pension law allows pension fund assets to be invested in infrastructure across the country, saying many jobs would be created in the course of infrastructural development and housing, such that many Nigerians would be gainfully employed. This, she said, would go a long way in alleviating the pains of austerity measures.

Anohu-Amazu recalled that the Pension Reform Act, 2014 allows contributors seeking to own their primary homes to apply to use part of their Retirement Savings Account (RSA) balances as equity contributions for residential mortgage subject to guidelines issued by the Commission.

“The process of issuing these guidelines is already at advanced stages and it is our expectation that as soon as implemented, this development would assist in bridging the housing deficit in Nigeria,” she stressed.

The Director General said the application of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) by States and Local Governments received a boost under the new pension law since a standard which State Governments are required to comply with for the benefit of their respective employees had been set.

The 2014 Act also made provisions for voluntary participation in the CPS, thereby paving the way for the coverage of the informal sector. This is intended at extending the benefits of the Scheme to a wider horizon of labour in the Nigerian economy she stressed.

Reviewing the Pension Reform Act, 2014 further, she said the responsibilities of other government institutions in the implementation of the scheme and the administration of the defunct Defined Benefits Scheme are clearly spelt out.

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