Picture of Andrew Spencer

Prof. Andrew Spencer

Board Chairman

National Insurance Fund

Picture of Pearnel Charles, Jr.

The Hon. Pearnel Charles, Jr.

Minister with Portfolio: Labour and Social Security

Ministry of Labour and Social Security (MLSS)

Picture of Dione Jennings

Mrs Dione Jennings

Permanent Secretary

Ministry of Labour and Social Security (MLSS)

Overview

The National Insurance Fund (NIF), established under Section 39 of the National Insurance Act, manages the investment portfolio to maximize returns and provide pensions and other benefits to eligible individuals registered under the National Insurance Scheme. The NIF receives funding through contributions made to the National Insurance Scheme, and it invests these contributions. The Fund then disburses pensions and other benefits to those eligible under the Scheme.

The National Insurance Act requires regular actuarial reviews to ensure that payment rates will sustain the Fund’s health in the future. Therefore, effective financial planning is essential. In 1990, the Government established the National Insurance Board, recognising the need for careful management of the NIF’s diversified investments. The current 16-member Board brings expertise in banking, investment, finance, legal affairs, real estate, and social sectors. To fulfill its mandate, the NIF’s staff and Board must uphold strong corporate governance. Let’s take a look at their progress!

Key Compliance Results

Indicators

Findings

Board with requisite skills as per the Competency Profile

Chairperson is not sitting more than two consecutive terms

Chairperson that chairs no more than two other public boards

Board with a minimum of 30% male members

Board with a minimum of 30% female members

Current board retained at least 3 members or a third of previous board

Board Charter (which includes conflict of interest provisions)

Non-Executive Independent Chair

Trained Corporate Secretary

Annual board training (in procurement, risk management, etc.)

Annual board evaluation

Board processes are executed (AGM, Annual Calenders, Meeting Frequency, Filings at Companies Office, etc.)

Board minutes are transmitted to the Permanent Secretary

Information & Disclosure policy

Internal auditor that reports to board through Audit Committee

Audit Committee with Terms of Reference

Audit Committee with three or more members including a qualified accountant/persons possessing expertise in finance

Audit Committee that does not include the Board Chair

Audit Committee that excludes the Procurement Committee Chair

Procurement Committee that rotates members every three years

Independent Chair of Procurement Committee (not chaired by Finance Director)

Board procedures in place regarding procurement oversight

Trained Procurement Committee

Annual Procurement Plan

Annual Report to the Responsible Minister submitted within 4 months of the end of the entity's financial year

Annual Board-Approved Corporate Plan in place by Nov 30 (must include strategic objectives, budget and work plan)

Annual Report tabled in Parliament within six (6) months of the entity's financial year

Minister issued Statement of Corporate Expectation to board

Chair and Responsible Minister met at least twice yearly to discuss Agency performance and emerging issues

Corporate Social Responsibility Framework (including Donations Policy)

Code of Ethics with conflict-of-interest provisions

Staff that are trained in Code of Ethics

Whistle Blowing Policy

Enterprise Risk Management Policy

Indicators

Findings

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$3 TRILLION+
not accounted for

HELP US HOLD OUR GOVERNMENT AND PARLIAMENT TO ACCOUNT!

Governance is too important to be left solely to our politicians. Send a letter to your MP and to the Parliament letting them know where you stand.

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