The National Pension Commission (PenCom) and the Trade Union Congress of Nigeria (TUC) have strengthened their partnership to accelerate pension reforms aimed at guaranteeing income security and dignified retirement for Nigerian workers, signalling a decisive shift toward measurable impact in the country’s pension system.
Speaking at the inaugural bi-annual roundtable between both institutions, the Director-General of PenCom, Omolola Oloworaran, said the collaboration underscores a shared responsibility to ensure that workers do not retire into hardship, noting that the engagement will go beyond dialogue to focus on concrete outcomes that improve lives.
She explained that, after more than two decades of reforms that stabilised the pension architecture and boosted confidence, the commission is now prioritising inclusiveness, benefit adequacy, and stronger enforcement, adding that regular engagement with the TUC would help align regulatory actions with workers’ expectations.
President of TUC, Festus Osifo, described the interaction as timely, stressing that closer cooperation is essential to strengthening the system and improving delivery.
He noted that although the introduction of the Pension Reform Act in 2004 was initially met with scepticism, the scheme has evolved into one of the most credible components of Nigeria’s financial system, maintaining professionalism and public trust.
Central to the renewed engagement is PenCom’s reform agenda, tagged Pension Revolution 2.0, which is designed to boost retirement income, expand coverage and protect pension savings from inflationary and macroeconomic pressures. As part of the initiative, the Commission is working to introduce health insurance coverage for contributors, particularly low-income earners,
In a move to deepen social protection and improve workers’ welfare beyond retirement savings, PenCom is also advancing plans to establish a minimum pension guarantee through a Pension Protection Fund, backed by improved Federal Government support following the clearance of outstanding pension liabilities.
The framework, currently funded by industry stakeholders, is expected to commence in the public sector before expanding to private-sector contributors as funding strengthens.
To improve returns, the Commission has revised its investment guidelines, expanding allowable asset classes to include infrastructure and other real assets that can hedge against inflation and currency volatility, while also introducing securities lending and repurchase agreements to deepen market activity and enhance yields.
Early indications show that these measures are beginning to reverse years of weak real returns, with pension fund performance now approaching and, in some cases, exceeding inflation.
Despite the gains, coverage remains limited, with participation still concentrated in the formal sector and compliance uneven across states.
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