综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

Hong Kong SAR must achieve universal retirement protection

Updated: 2014-09-24 07:20

By Eddy Li(HK Edition)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small

Hong Kong SAR must achieve universal retirement protection

In the 2013 Policy Address, the Chief Executive stressed that retirement protection was a recurrent theme relating to the problem of poverty in society. In March 2013, the Commission on Poverty (CoP) commissioned a consultancy team at the University of Hong Kong led by Professor Nelson Chow, who specializes in social security and social welfare. Chow's brief was to conduct a study on the future development of retirement protection. Recently, a research report was submitted to the CoP for discussion. This was also published on the internet for public reference.

As an expert who shows compassion for vulnerable groups in society, Chow is highly respected. He was the right choice for the role of chief consultant studying universal retirement protection. The central proposal of the research report is to establish a flat-rate retirement allowance. This will ensure elderly people over the age of 65 have adequate financial support - under a non-means tested system of superannuation.

Chow also raised a crucial issue - How will this be funded? Will it be from government resources, a superannuation contribution scheme or from the MPF (Mandatory Provident Fund) scheme? According to Chow it is inevitable that society will have to contribute more. "In the end, Hong Kong people will have to decide whether they are willing to pay for this. If people are not willing to pay, let's not discuss this anymore - let's not waste our time; I don't want to do these studies anymore," Chow said emphatically during a recent interview. In this regard, I totally agree with him.

The universal pension system suggested in the report is aimed at replacing the existing Old Age Living Allowance and Old Age Allowance (i.e. "fruit money"). All people over 65 years old will be eligible for these payments. It will impose no wealth based restrictions. It will provide a greater amount than the existing allowances. But the complexities of implementing this are unprecedented. The most challenging part is obtaining enough capital to fund these payments. Society will have to reach a consensus on this. Otherwise, all the research and discussion on the issue over the years has been pointless.

Chow developed the idea of three sources of contribution to guarantee the stability of funds: the government, employers and employees. Above all, the government would need to inject a one-off contribution of HK$50 billion into the pension fund as a capital base and take responsibility for paying half of the pension. As for the other half, he advocates a "payroll old-age tax", which would function in a similar way as the MPF scheme. This would be payable by both employers and employees at certain rates according to salary levels.

However, due to the aging population, new projections show that the pension fund is highly likely to be in deficit from 2026 onwards and that by 2041, as little as HK$13.5 billion would remain in the fund.

We should also remember that the proposed HK$3,000 monthly allowance will definitely have to be raised due to inflation. As a consequence, this deficit will probably appear earlier and become larger. By which time, the government will be forced to increase employer and employee contributions. But will the public accept this?

The debate over a universal pension system first surfaced almost two decades ago. The city's failure to implement the scheme was mainly because it was almost impossible to reach consensus on how to fund it. As far as I'm concerned, the biggest questions vital to implementation of a universal retirement protection scheme are:

Firstly, necessity. Will it be a waste of resources if society supports the elderly regardless of their economic status? According to a survey by the University of Hong Kong, last year, about 732,000 Hong Kong people can be classified as millionaires. These are people who possess current assets in excess of HK$1 million. This tranche of society, which comprises 10 percent of Hong Kong's population do not really need that monthly HK$3,000 from the age of 65. Why don't we spare the money for those who are really in need?

The second is fairness. The "payroll old-age tax" requires tax-payers to pay according to their level of income. This means that regardless of individual contribution, everyone gets a flat-rate payment of HK$3,000 from the age of 65. Clearly not everyone is generous enough to be prepared to make financial contributions to help fund the retirement of other people.

So the government certainly has to act prudently in considering the universal retirement protection scheme.

The author is vice-president of the Chinese Manufacturers' Association of Hong Kong.

(HK Edition 09/24/2014 page10)

晴隆县| 江山市| 沈丘县| 涿鹿县| 延安市| 大足县| 仪征市| 北辰区| 象州县| 沽源县| 宜都市| 乌兰县| 金山区| 九江市| 周宁县| 崇州市| 天峨县| 邵阳市| 余干县| 青阳县| 长葛市| 莱阳市| 密山市| 托克逊县| 榆树市| 陕西省| 临朐县| 循化| 吴桥县| 景东| 莱阳市| 和田县| 星子县| 广东省| 调兵山市| 东方市| 鹤山市| 封开县| 淮滨县| 义马市| 兰溪市|