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South Africa is changing its retirement rules to help boost country savings: how


A study of 160 countries, spanning 60 years of economic history, establishes that there is no country that has been able to transition from “poor to prosperous” without a high savings rate. And that households – in other words you and me – are one of the most important contributors to a country’s overall level of savings rate.

Yet, South Africa’s household savings rate is among the lowest in the world at only 0.5%. This is far below that of many emerging market peers like Brazil, Chile, or India where households save between 5% and 9% of gross domestic product.

Around the world, household savings don’t stay “under the mattress” but generally are channelled via banks and other financial institutions to serve as one of the main domestic sources of funding of capital investment. This means that ultimately your and my savings become the funder of harbours, highways, and hospitals which, in turn, are the major driver of long-term economic growth, job creation, and rising incomes.

The two-component retirement system which is being put in place in South Africa – or colloquially the “two pot system” – aims to make a contribution to repairing the country’s weak state of saving. The changes have important implications for people planning for retirement.

The new system, set to be implemented in South Africa on 1 September 2024, will apply to both private and state pensions, including the country’s largest fund, the Government Employees Pension Fund (GEPF).

The new system introduces two components to an individual’s retirement savings:

This makes a dramatic change to the current system, which allows individuals to withdraw all their compulsory pension savings when they leave a job. The temptation to withdraw all the savings when changing employment will be removed by the new regulations, guaranteeing better retirement outcomes in the long run.

How it will work

The retirement or preservation component makes up two-thirds of contributions. Here, two-thirds of what individuals save towards retirement, via a fund (not their own private savings) must go into this first pot.

This component is designed to preserve a portion of the retirement fund for retirement purposes. Under the new regulations, this portion of a person’s retirement savings must be retained in this “pot”. Withdrawals are not allowed until retirement age. This is intended to ensure that individuals will have sufficient funds to support themselves in retirement and, in turn, will give the South African economy a more stable and growing pool of savings to fund economic growth, and employment.

The savings component, comprising one third of contributions, allows the early withdrawal of some of a person’s retirement fund before retirement age. This gives flexibility in meeting unexpected financial needs. A minimum of R2,000 (US$110) can be withdrawn, and there is no maximum limit (subject to the size of this pot), although only one withdrawal may be made per year. Withdrawals from this second pot will be taxed at the member’s marginal tax rate (the rate applied to your last rand of income) and will likely incur additional administration fees.

There is no doubt that South Africa is a country of immense disparity between those who are financially stable and those who are financially fragile. For those facing financial hardship the need to access funds set aside for retirement can be very real.

With a Gini coefficient of 63.0, South Africa’s income distribution ranks as the most unequal in the world. In part, this is a reason why the proposals have been made to give individuals the opportunity to access a portion of their retirement funds in the case of dire need.

This makes some sense given the financial fragility of households, but it comes at a potential cost of compromising household’s long-term savings, and it also will be of no impact to the employed who do not belong to retirement schemes or the unemployed.

However, the tragedy is that those who need to get hold of their funds ahead of time are exactly the people who should not. They will need every cent of their retirement savings to provide for themselves in their retirement years. It is estimated that fewer than one-in-ten South Africans have sufficient funds to maintain their standard of living when they retire.
So, what does the two-component system mean for retirees and investors ahead of retirement?

Pros and cons

Under the new system, the retirement component can never be touched or spent until you retire. This is a huge advantage over the current system in which, if a person leaves his or her employment, they can take the full amount in cash and spend it. This has resulted in less than 10% of people being financially able to…



Read More: South Africa is changing its retirement rules to help boost country savings: how

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