Manmohan Singh pushes pension reforms to state Monday, January 22, 2007 05:16 [IST]
New Delhi:
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh today (Jan 22, 2007) pushed for pension reform
and urged chief ministers to allow a part of the funds to be parked in shares
to expand social security net and ensure healthy state finances.
"It is my belief that there is a lot to be gained by
moving forward and allowing a multiplicity of pension products delivered by
variety of agencies to people," the prime minister told a chief ministers'
conference on pension reforms.
He said a suggestion being considered is to allow a part of
the funds to be put into areas as prescribed for non-government provident
funds, pending resolution of issues related to the Pension Fund Regulatory and
Development Authority Bill.
"The pattern permitted has been circulated and will
fetch a return superior to that given by the government at present without
compromising the safety factor," he said, adding the returns amounted to
just 8 percent under existing schemes.
The new system calls for investing 5 percent of the corpus
in shares, 25 percent in central government securities, 15 percent in state
government securities and 25 percent in bonds.
The Left parties, which support the United Progressive Alliance
(UPA) Government, are opposed to pension reforms. As a result the Employees
Provident Fund Organisation has not adopted the new guidelines.
Besides the chief ministers of a number of states, the
conference was attended by, among others, External Affairs Minister Pranab
Mukherjee, Defence Minister A.K. Antony, Home Minister Shivraj Patil and
Finance Minister P. Chidambaram.
The prime minister said 11 percent of India's workforce was covered under
some form of pension schemes and that, even within the organized sector, the
coverage was accounted for largely by government employees.
"Therefore, workers in the unorganised sector,
constituting 90 percent of the workforce, need a comprehensive pension system
which they can subscribe to," the prime minister said.
"We need better management of our pension liabilities
so that state finances can be managed in a healthy and sustainable way in
future. This is a very important basis for the changes in the pension system,"
he said.
Earlier, the finance minister said that the central
government's expenditure on pension had gone up from Rs.32 billion in 1990-91
to Rs.289 billion last fiscal, and jumped from 7.6 percent to 10.5 percent as a
percentage of tax revenue to total pension outgo.
"Yet, a unique advantage India enjoys today is it has a
relatively young working population. Around 220 million persons employed are
below 40 years of age," the finance minister said.
"Thus, a large majority of India's workforce, that is in the
age group of 20-40 years, has the opportunity and the capacity to save for
their retirement. The moment must be seized," he added.
Chidambaram said he appreciated the fact that 17 state
governments had decided to introduce a new contribution pension system for new
employees and some others were taking pro-active steps towards the same |