How can the shortfall in the T&T National Insurance Scheme (NIS) be addressed?
The Caribbean Actuarial Association (CAA) is set to discuss T&T’s NIS situation at the Hyatt Regency during its annual conference today.
However, Caribbean Actuaries have noted that the warning signs that the scheme’s income has been falling short of its payout have been around for some time.
“It’s a five-year cycle for actuarial reviews. The last one was done for 2016 to 2021. The latest one has not been published yet. But we can tell from the National Insurance Board’s annual report that expenditure is now greater than contributions.
“And to me that’s not uncommon in the Caribbean systems because over time costs increase. And if you don’t curtail expenditure, and you don’t increase your contribution rate, then you’re going to have a situation where you have to start dipping into your reserves to help pay the benefits,” said actuary, Derek Osborne, in a phone interview with the Business Guardian ahead of the conference.
“I believe that the last time the review suggested by mid-2030 the fund will be depleted,” Osborne said.
The underlying message is obvious, some level of change is required for NIS and the National Insurance Board: “Certainly if the NIB wants to pay pensions, ten years from now, some reform has to happen. Therefore the economy has to pick up in a way that’s going to produce a lot more contribution income.”
But the indicators are the contributions are on the decline for multiple reasons.
Firstly, T&T’s aging workforce has meant that more people are likely to draw from it soon, rather than supplement it.
Former Minister in the Ministry of Finance Mariano Browne explained that even the recent move to increase the retirement age would be a stop-gap measure as opposed to a long-term solution.
“The decisions are either you increase the contributions to the fund from those who are working, and you change the retirement age. Those are the two obvious ones that have to be done.
“But there are some longer-term implications, the longer-term implications are that as country ages, the social security system and government’s expenditure are likely to increase. When people get older, they need more healthcare. Social security is a key issue,” said Browne.
He explained that for the fund to continue to be sustainable, there would need to be a change in mindset from the average citizen as he noted the expectation that the fund would be there to provide in their latter days has lulled many into not taking responsibility for their retirement planning.
“We talked about the retirement age, we talked about payroll, the payroll or whatever increasing the contribution margin. The third issue, and this is very important—we’ve been talking about pension reform for 25 years but we have never done it—is calibrating the insurance system with private insurance schemes.
“Now, what do we mean by that? Well, technically, people have been looking at the NIS as though it were your sole source of retirement income. The answer that is it can’t be and that individuals have to save more during the course of their lifetime, to be able to handle their retirement requirements,” said Browne.
“The first one is that you have to save regardless of what your income is. That is on you, that’s your responsibility. The second part of that is that governments therefore have to do more to improve the performance of the economy,” he added.
Browne also recognised that digital platforms and the rise of entrepreneurship may have also led to lower contributions.
“What we’ll find is that you will have a number of self-employed people who don’t qualify for NIS but technically may qualify for the old age pension. Now, who pays that? The answer is government.
“Where does that come from? It comes from taxation revenue. But if these people who are self-employed are not contributing to NIS, the reality is that they are unlikely to make a contribution or make the same amount of contributions to PAYE either.
“That then puts additional difficulties on a small number of people who are working within the system.
“People who are making contributions and people who are paying tax. So you have people who have been working, but technically do not bother the system, earning their income differentially would then now make social security claims,” said Browne.
However, Browne acknowledged that political decisions have also created some of the issues that plague the fund currently and if these issues are to be addressed, decisions would have to be made away from the election platform.
“That brings us to some critical issues here. Both the Senior Citizen Grant and the National Insurance pension have been subject to political decisions. In other words, people have been made offers when it comes around election time.
“The offers do not bear any relation to the capacity of the fund to finance those contributions over the long term. So what you get is a political lottery. Do you want to vote for the person who is going to make the best contribution (to the NIS) or is going to increase the old age pension?” said Browne, alluding to multiple election campaigns which saw the increase of government pension as major manifesto promises,
“Well, from where I sit, as a former minister, I’d have to say that you have to basically take politicians out of that equation altogether. And don’t allow them to make those kinds of decisions.”
Osborne said adjustments to the retirement age would have to be the first port of call for adjustment as well as an adjustment governing the rules of early retirement.
“In Trinidad, you have a situation where even though the pension age is 65 officially, people are allowed to go at age 60. If they stop working or stop working for a while and they apply with no reduction factor. So one of the solutions is to implement a reduction factor for those who go before age 65.
“Or possibly eliminate 60 age, as the early pension and maybe make it 62 or 64 or even 65 essentially starting pensions later. Right now unfortunately almost everybody gets the minimum pension formula. There’s not much you can do with this formula. Everybody gets the minimum,” said Osborne.
However, Browne said there would be pushback to such moves as there had already been objections from unions concerning the increased retirement age.
Osborne said it was incumbent that the unions learn that these adjustments are among three major pillars for the sustainability of the fund.
“One is benefit adequacy. Another one is contribution affordability. And the third one is long-term sustainability. So when I hear the cry of unions and certain people to say that benefits need to exceed a certain amount, that’s all well and good.
“But then if you keep as you’re doing now in ten years, 20 years’ time something has to give,’ said Osborne, adding “and then you keep hoping that the economy will continue to grow and create new jobs. So we’re going to have a sweet spot with regard to those three things, benefit adequacy, contribution affordability, long term sustainability.”
Browne once again noted that another possible option would be some adjustments to our immigration policies so that the numbers of contributors could increase.
“The studies everywhere show that immigration is beneficial at all levels. Targeted immigration is even better because what it means is that you’re helping you’re looking at the structure of the economy and the structure of the labour force and making informed interventions so you can grow the areas of maximum contribution,” said Browne.