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Raising retirement, re-employment ages to proceed as planned: Minister

This article is more than 12 months old

Raising the statutory retirement age to 63 and the re-employment age to 68 will go ahead as planned on July 1 next year, said Manpower Minister Josephine Teo yesterday.

The public service will also fulfil its earlier commitment to raise the ages a year ahead of legislation for its roughly 146,000 officers on July 1 this year, she added.

"This will help keep us on track to raise the retirement age to 65 and re-employment age to 70 by the end of this decade," Mrs Teo said during the debate on her ministry's budget.

Meanwhile, the raising of Central Provident Fund (CPF) contribution rates for senior workers will also go ahead on Jan 1, 2022, "barring any unforeseen circumstances".

The increase, which was to have taken place on Jan 1 this year, would have seen employers and workers contribute either 0.5 percentage point or one percentage point more for workers aged 55 to 70, based on the person's age.

It was deferred by a year to help employers manage costs amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

Mrs Teo was laying out her ministry's three priorities for this year, which include securing the jobs rebound in the short term and supporting business transformation.

The third priority is helping every segment of the workforce - including senior workers - emerge stronger from the pandemic.

Going ahead with raising the ages as planned will provide older workers with the choice to work longer and help them build up more savings for their retirement, said Mrs Teo.

The move to lift the statutory retirement and re-employment ages was announced in 2019.

Mrs Teo noted that older workers had fallen far behind younger ones when it came to median incomes and amounts accumulated in their CPF accounts.

The $1.3 billion Senior Worker Support Package was announced last year, which includes the Senior Worker Early Adopter Grant and the Part-time Re-employment Grant, to help employers in raising the retirement and re-employment ages.

Since the grants were introduced last July, 1,700 companies with 17,000 senior workers have been supported, said Mrs Teo, adding that the budget for the scheme will be topped up by more than $200 million to benefit 75,000 more senior workers.

"But the larger goal is to create the momentum and shape a new norm among employers, where many more companies raise retirement and re-employment ages to 65 and 70 well before 2030," she noted.

Raising the CPF contribution rates for those 55 and above will further increase the amount of payouts senior workers get, she added.

Half of the increase will be absorbed for employers through the CPF Transition Offset scheme. The Senior Employment Credit will also provide up to 8 per cent of wage offset for the next two years until the end of next year, with a possible extension later, said Mrs Teo.

On Tuesday, Workers' Party MP Louis Chua (Sengkang GRC) had asked MOM to consider offering CPF members options to earn higher investment returns through government investment vehicles.

Mrs Teo said that before the pandemic, the Government was looking at introducing a Lifetime Retirement Investment Scheme for CPF members.

But the pandemic has changed the investment environment, and planning assumptions need to be updated, said Mrs Teo, adding that she will share details when they are ready.

This article first appeared in The Straits Times.

Employment