7 research outputs found
Pensions in Nigeria : the performance of the new system of personal accounts
In 2004, Nigeria copied the 1981 Chilean pension reform and established a funded system based upon personal accounts. The new system was neither appropriate for a country such as Nigeria, nor did it meet aspirations of improving pension coverage or helping economic growth. The current financial and economic crisis hit the scheme in so far as it hit stock values. However, more important has been the negative real interest rates that can be earned on government bonds and on bank deposits â where the majority of contributions are invested. Bank scandals and rising fiscal deficits do not breed confidence in the system or the government's ability to deliver meaningful benefits in old age
AnĂĄlisis comparativo de las reformas de las pensiones y los desafĂos en Ghana y Nigeria
Re: duplication of corporate governance codes and the dilemma of firms with dual regulatory jurisdictions
Analyse comparative des réformes des pensions au Ghana et au Nigéria et des difficultés rencontrées
Pension reform in Nigeria : how not to `learn from others'
While the Chilean pension reform has received considerable attention, its emulation in Nigeria has not. This article is the first in-depth analysis of the Nigerian reform. It suggests that the Nigerian authorities failed to learn the lessons of Chile. They transposed a system that both failed to serve the country from which it was copied and that is inappropriate to the country to which it was copied. For countries such as Nigeria, alternative forms of provision for old age are needed. A social pension might be considered