Monday, November 29, 2021

NSSF MID TERM PASSED BUT NOT IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS

This week two momentous announcements were reported.

This New Vision quoting informed sources reported that a January 3, 2022 opening for schools is being considered at the education ministry.

Hot on the heels of this was parliament passing of the new law governing the National Social Security Fund (NSSF). The new law’s major amendment, or at least the one that has captured the most attention is the allowing members mid-term access to their savings.

According to the new law, savers will be able to withdraw up to 20 percent of their savings when they attain the age of 45 and have saved for at least 10 years.

The bill still has to be assented to by the president and the finance minister will agree with the NSSF board how this new amendment will be executed. The commitment by government is that they will start paying out after two months from the passing of the bill.

Simple arithmetic suggests the money will not be available for Christmas merry making or paying school fees in January.

But therein lies the challenge. 

The supporters of the amendment argue that they should be given access to their savings to set up some investments before they grow too old – 55, to set them up and run them. That is the reason we told everybody and ourselves to justify the raid on our savings.

The truth, which will soon become apparent, is that we really want the money to consume. We are not unlike the man who has been on a long journey and just wants to lay his luggage down, rest and look back on far we have come even when they are just steps from completing the journey.

"We will buy cars, start or finish the construction of our home, take a holiday to places far and wide and god forbid, go and work up a tab at the bar to validate our place in society...

For the vast majority of us, our NSSF savings are the biggest asset on our balance sheets. It is so because government dragged you kicking and screaming to save, were it not for that, we would not have two shillings of our own to rub together.

The management of NSSF’s argument that this move, which could cost about a trillion shillings would hinder their ability to continue paying out double digit interest rates into the future. Not in those exact words but the sh1.8trillion pay out this year, which includes money to those who due their payment at retirement, means either they have to liquidate some of their investments and hence forgo those profits or borrow the money, lowering their profitability and hence the interest they can afford to pay.

NSSF has grown into the biggest fund of its kind in the region, a lot of this is due to better compliance from employers but also because they have been allowed to retain most of their profits, which they reinvested. Under the new scenario NSSF will have less to play with and it can be argued then, that Richard Byarugaba and his troops will have to really earn their keep now, because crazy as it sounds while hobbling NSSF we will still expect the stellar returns of the last few years.

For the rest of us, if we do invest, I can guarantee we will not find investments that net us more than 10 percent a year and hence we would have been better off leaving our money in NSSF. But of course we will take comfort from the fact that we have our money close to ourselves – even if its dwindling to nothingness, rather than have it managed by a faceless institution.

Think about it, if mid-term access never came up and NSSF managed ten percent interest for the next ten years, the money you have now in your account will have more than doubled – would have grown 2.594 times to be more precise. So if you have a sh100m in your account today and never added a cent of your or employer’s money in the ten years, when you are retiring at 55 you will have sh259m to take home.

But we argue that what if something happens to NSSF in that time and we lose all our money?

Well I remember someone who collected his sh100m in 2006. While NSSF has not managed double digit interest since then, let us assume they averaged eight percent during the period, my friend would be looking at more than sh300m in his account now, assuming he never contributed a cent since.

"Obviously it’s a case of better a bird in the hand than two in the bush....

Give us our money we eat it and the future shall take care of itself.

 


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