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Opposition Demands Pension Reforms

2 min readSt. Catherine
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Pension reform took centre-stage in Parliament Tuesday when St Catherine Eastern MP Denise Daley used her sectoral presentation to demand urgent changes.

 

She warns that too many Jamaicans retire into financial uncertainty and says pensions must be paid on time, backlogs cleared and seniors protected from inflation.

 

A presentation that concluded with the leader of government business in the parliament saying it was among the best from the opposition benches. The Eastern St Catherine MP since 2012 spoke passionately about a matter that concerns Jamaica's aging population —retirement. MP Daley says retirement should never mean financial uncertainty.

 

 

 

“Months and even years pass. Meanwhile, pensioners are still left wondering how they will

purchase medication or simply put food on their table. Madam Speaker, that is unacceptable.

 

Retirement should not be… Madam Speaker, retirement should not be become a period of financial uncertainty after a lifetime of faithful service.”

 

MP Daley also told the parliament pensions must be paid on time, backlogs cleared, and safeguards put in place so inflation doesn't push seniors into poverty.

 

“The opposition therefore is recommending that pension funds begin verification process at least one year before retirement. Every document should be reviewed, every discrepancy resolved and every approval completed before the employees leave the public service or the private institution.”

 

She said pension payments should commence immediately upon retirement, not months and years after, and warned that as Jamaica goes digital, modernization must include accessibility for the elderly.

 

“Another issue receiving far too little attention is the growing digital divide. Technology undoubtedly bring efficiency. However, efficiency should never come at the expense of accessibility. Many senior citizens do not even own a phone, much less smartphone. They don't even near where no internet is. Madam Speaker, many have never even receive a formal digital literacy training. And all you can hear about now they must go online, go on app and all kinds of things.

 

As a result, they often find themselves standing outside cashless banking facilities confused and frustrated trying to access their own money that belongs to them.”

 

Daley's call comes amid growing concern about the pace of pension payments and the vulnerability of seniors in a high inflation economy.

 

She urged the government to act swiftly, saying Jamaica's retirees deserve protection, not hardship.

 

 

Syndicated from CVM TV · originally published .

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