Home Retirement Explainer: Why is interest on Retirement Accounts not accrued once CPF Life payouts start, and how much will your family get when you die?

Explainer: Why is interest on Retirement Accounts not accrued once CPF Life payouts start, and how much will your family get when you die?

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SINGAPORE — A recent parliamentary debate has thrust the Central Provident Fund (CPF) Life annuity scheme under the spotlight, with one Member of Parliament (MP) highlighting that when CPF members under the scheme die, the interest earned in their Retirement Account does not go to their beneficiaries.

On Monday (Feb 26), Workers’ Party MP Louis Chua from the Sengkang Group Representation Constituency referred to the CPF Board’s website, which states that when CPF members die, the interest earned on the CPF Life premiums is not included in the amount that gets paid to beneficiaries after the death.

This is because the premiums are risk-pooled — a fundamental concept behind annuity schemes that enable members to get regular lifetime payouts, even if they live longer lives than expected.

Mr Chua then pointed out that although the stated interest rate of the Special Account and the Retirement Account is identical, the actual yield earned by the two accounts “could not be more different”.

The debate followed Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong’s announcement that the CPF Special Account will be closed when members turn 55.

Questions about CPF-related announcements in Budget 2024, including the raising of the Enhanced Retirement Sum to four times of the Basic Retirement Sum, and how such moves affect retirement adequacy, had dominated the parliamentary debate.

Several MPs also called for a review of the interest rates for the various CPF accounts.

Right now, the interest rate is 4.08 per cent per annum for the Special Account and Retirement Account, and 2.5 per cent for the Ordinary Account.

And on Wednesday, Minister for Manpower Tan See Leng said in Parliament that the closure of the Special Account is not aimed at “saving interest monies” for the Government.

Ahead of the debate on the Ministry of Manpower’s budget, TODAY takes a closer look at where the interest yield under the CPF Retirement Account goes to under CPF Life, and how risk-pooling works. 

HOW CPF LIFE WORKS

CPF Life, also known as the CPF Lifelong Income for the Elderly scheme, is a national longevity insurance annuity plan that provides CPF members with monthly payouts for as long as they live.

It is mandatory for Singapore citizens and permanent residents to save and set aside money for retirement under CPF.

In general, annuities are long-term financial schemes in which insurers provide premium-paying members with a steady stream of income over a long period of time, usually to support retirement.

In the context of CPF Life, the premium to be paid is taken from members’ CPF Retirement Account at the age of 65.

Members will be automatically included in the CPF Life scheme if they are a Singapore citizen or permanent resident born in or after 1958, and have at least S$60,000 in retirement savings when monthly payouts begin. 

What this also means is that from the ages of 55 to 65, members earn a high interest rate on the Retirement Account, which will then be used to purchase the annuity policy at the end of this period.

There are also various plans under CPF Life that members may choose, which affect the type of payouts based on the members’ preferences.

Members can also choose to start their payouts from age 65 to 70, so those who want to defer payouts until 70 will continue to earn interest on their savings in the Retirement Account until then.

The CPF Life’s premium and payout levels are dependent on the member’s Retirement Account savings used to join the annuity, as well as the member’s sex and age.

For example, if a CPF member has S$200,000 in his Retirement Account at age 55, he is projected to have around S$300,000 in his Retirement Account by the age of 65, including the compounded interest, based on the current 4 per cent interest rate floor for CPF.

Under CPF Life, if this man applies to receive payouts under the Standard Plan from 65 years old onwards and dies at age 75, he will receive an estimated S$1,630 a month or S$19,560 a year.

If he receives payouts under the same plan but deferred the start of his payouts until the age of 70, he will earn more interest from ages 65 to 70 in his Retirement Account and his premium would be S$370,000 by the time payouts begin. He will also receive a higher monthly payout of an estimated S$2,180 — or S$26,160 a year. 

If the same member lives to 90 and started receiving payouts at the age of 70, he would have exhausted the original S$370,000 premium and would have received an estimated S$523,200 in total from the annuity, from the age of 70 to the end of his life.

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