02/07/19
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The National Pension Commission (PenCom) says total pension fund assets have grown to N8.63 trillion as at December 2018.
Ms Aisha Dahir-Umar, its Acting Director-General, disclosed this at the public hearing of the House of Representatives Ad-hoc Committee in Abuja on Thursday.
The committee is mandated to investigate activities of PenCom and alleged violation of Acts establishing it.
Dahir-Umar said the fund had an average monthly contribution of N29.15 billion, while the total pension assets were equivalent to 7.40 per cent of the Nigerian re-based GDP.
She said  that the pool of pension funds generated by the Contributory Pension Scheme had aided the deepening of Nigeria’s financial sector.
The PenCom boss said that the fund had also provided a platform for attaining strategic programmes of government in the areas of infrastructure, housing and the development of the real sector of the economy.
She said that the number of registered contributors grew to 8.41 million as at December 2018.
According to her, this figure represents about 12.09 per cent of Nigeria’s working population and 4.29 per cent of total Nigeria population.
She said that the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) had simplified the process of payment of retirement benefits through the issuance of effective regulations and guidelines for accessing such benefits.
Dahir-Umar also disclosed that 260,808 persons had retired under the Scheme as at December 2018 and were currently receiving pensions as and when due with an average monthly pension payment of N10.18 billion.
“The pension reform has gained public confidence and acceptability within the short period of its implementation.
“The private sector, which hitherto was apprehensive of the CPS as a ploy by the public sector to raise funds to address its huge pension liabilities, has come to accept and is religiously implementing the reform.
“To date, about 200,000 private sector employers of labour are implementing the CPS and have contributed about 60 per cent of the total pension fund assets.
“The Contributory Pension Scheme has also introduced transparency and integrity in the pension administration system in Nigeria and inception of the reform to date, there had not been a single incidence of fraud or mismanagement of the pension funds and assets under the Scheme.
“Attracted by the enormous benefits of the Scheme, 24 States of the Federation and the FCT had enacted the laws on the CPS and are at different stages of implementation, six States are at the Bill stage on the CPS, three states have adopted the Contributory Defined Benefit Scheme (CDBS).
“And two states are currently drafting Bills to introduce CDBS, while one state has continued with the Defined Scheme as at December, 2018,” she said.
The PenCom boss said that Pension Transitional Arrangement Directorate (PTAD) was established to handle issues of Federal Government’s retirees exempted from the CPS subject to the regulation and supervision of PenCom.
“Indeed, payment of pensions to public sector retirees by PTAD has become more regular and efficient under the supervisory oversight of PenCom.
“The pension reform has also positively impacted on other sectors of the Nigerian economy. Notably, the reform facilitated the growth of Group Life Insurance and development of Life Annuity in the insurance industry.
“Indeed, monthly pension payment under the Life Annuity Scheme has average of N3.15 billion as at December 2018.
“It is also noteworthy that the total premium paid to insurance companies for the monthly Life Annuity was N304.09 billion as at December, 2018.
“This has significantly assisted the growth of the insurance industry in Nigeria which is a special focus area under the Federal Government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP),” she said.
Latest Reality Blog is a legal blog where you are updated on online latest news, gist, entertainment, events, motivational text, and genue articles.

Germany's competition regulator has told Facebook to substantially restrict how it collects and combines data about its users unless they give it explicit consent. The watchdog has carried out a probe into the social network following concerns that members were unaware of the extent of the firm's activities. It covered data gathered from third-party sources as well as via Facebook's other apps, including Instagram. The US firm has said it will appeal.

Specifically, the FCO has ruled that:

  * Facebook's various services - including WhatsApp and Instagram - can continue to collect data, but they cannot combine the information with a user's main Facebook account unless the member gives their voluntary consent

  * Collecting data from third-party websites and assigning it to a Facebook user's account is likewise only allowed if that member has given the firm permission
Latest Reality Blog is a legal blog where you are updated on online latest news, gist, entertainment, events, motivational text, and genue articles.

A Civil Society Organisation (CSO), Centre for Democracy and Development (CDD) on Thursday said it would deploy a Global Positioning System (GPS) tracker to monitor the 2019 general elections.
Ms Idayat Hassan, CDD director while addressing a news conference on the centre’s “One-Stop-Shop for Analysis” of the 2019 General Elections’’, said that the centre would also inaugurate an election app for effective observation.
Hassan who was represented by Mr Shamsudeen Yusuf, a Senior Programmes Officer in organisation, said that the newly developed GPS-enabled CDD election tracker would be deployed to enable accredited field observers report on the election process.
“The tracker will also help us track where the observers are reporting from for quality control purposes.
“ The tracker is developed in a way that also allows citizens and journalists to register and report only on incidents on the day of elections.
“ The Centre is also deploying Telerivet – SMS-based platform for reporting and documenting data relating to Election Day activities.’’
Hassan said that the centre had also concluded its plan to inaugurate an Election Analysis Centre (EAC) as a “One-Stop-Shop’’ for rigorous analysis of the 2019 general elections.
She said that the EAC would be located at Fraser Suite, 294 Leventis Close, Central Business District, FCT, Abuja.
According to her, it is aimed at providing accurate and real-time analysis of events in the build-up to the polls, election day and post-election period in a more captivating, enriching and systematic manner.
She said that it would also provide informed analysis grounded in historical facts and data spanning 1999-2015 general elections, inclusive of off-cycle polls in the country.
Hassan said that 3,500 trained observers would be deployed to monitor the elections in all the 36 states, the 774 Local Government Areas (LGAs) and the 2,642 political wards in the country.
The CDD director said that the observers were being trained to carefully observe and report back on the accreditation and voting process, including movement of sensitive materials, opening of units, setting up of polling units, and accreditation and voting.
She said that the CDD’s EAC would have political scientists, historians, gender, conflict experts, data analyst and communication experts who would interrogate pre-election, Election Day and post-election events from a contemporary and historical lens
Hassan said that embedded in this analysis centre would be CDD’s fake news centre, adding that fake news could trigger fear and violence during election.
This, she said was the reason for CDD’s fact-checking team to spot, identify, investigate and counter fake news during the elections.
“For the first time in the history of Nigeria, there will be a live telecast of election analysis by a CSO tagged #Decision2019 on Arise TV available on DSTV Channel 416, Sky 519 and GoTV Channel 44.’’ She said.
She said the aim was to create a platform for impartial analysis using evidence and data to explain polls to the citizens.
Hassan said that the programme would inform voters about procedural matters and arrangements for the conduct of the elections, serve as a non-partisan platform for INEC to communicate its messages to the electorate.
Mr Damilola Praiseworth, Communications Officer, CDD said that the centre was leveraging on technology to examine the integrity of the elections.
Praiseworth said that this became imperative due to the loose link in Nigeria’s election collation process, adding that CDD and Policy Legal Advocacy Centre (situation room) was partnering to operate an Election Fusion Centre (EFC).
He said that EFC would tally and verify election results from all the 8,809 ward collation centres (WCCs) across the country.
The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that CDD was partnering with Open Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA), MacArthur Foundation, National Endowment for Democracy (NED), and National Democratic Institute (NDI), among others to achieve this.