Nov 21, 2009
CPF Life: Raise comfort level regarding payout guarantee
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WEDNESDAY'S report, '30,000 sign up for CPF Life', while encouraging, also begs the question of whether many more members would have enrolled in the annuity scheme if there were greater comfort about the sustainability and stability of payouts.
Although the scheme guarantees payouts for life, the amount received may fall if the lifespans of CPF Life members increase by more than expected, if Central Provident Fund (CPF) interest rates shrink, and if the Lifelong Income Fund becomes insolvent.
While we may have faith in the Government of today, who is to say that future politicians and civil servants will be equally competent?
To me, signing up as it stands now is akin to taking a bet that the status quo does not change over several decades.
If I were about to retire, I would rather purchase an annuity from reputable financial institutions such as NTUC Income or United Overseas Bank, which offer payouts that are not only legally guaranteed not to fall below clearly stated minimums, but may also be inflation-linked.
Spurred by competition, financial institutions have created innovative annuities, such as one for married couples that provides payouts as long as either husband or wife is alive.
Perhaps the CPF Board could outsource its scheme to trusted and financially sound private operators to offer a wider range of attractive annuity schemes. Above all, give retirees what they are looking for: payouts that carry iron-clad guarantees.
David Lok
CPF Life: Raise comfort level regarding payout guarantee
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<!-- end left side bar --><!-- story content : start -->
WEDNESDAY'S report, '30,000 sign up for CPF Life', while encouraging, also begs the question of whether many more members would have enrolled in the annuity scheme if there were greater comfort about the sustainability and stability of payouts.
Although the scheme guarantees payouts for life, the amount received may fall if the lifespans of CPF Life members increase by more than expected, if Central Provident Fund (CPF) interest rates shrink, and if the Lifelong Income Fund becomes insolvent.
While we may have faith in the Government of today, who is to say that future politicians and civil servants will be equally competent?
To me, signing up as it stands now is akin to taking a bet that the status quo does not change over several decades.
If I were about to retire, I would rather purchase an annuity from reputable financial institutions such as NTUC Income or United Overseas Bank, which offer payouts that are not only legally guaranteed not to fall below clearly stated minimums, but may also be inflation-linked.
Spurred by competition, financial institutions have created innovative annuities, such as one for married couples that provides payouts as long as either husband or wife is alive.
Perhaps the CPF Board could outsource its scheme to trusted and financially sound private operators to offer a wider range of attractive annuity schemes. Above all, give retirees what they are looking for: payouts that carry iron-clad guarantees.
David Lok