A Shariah-compliant company, promoting savings culture in the country, has
mooted the idea of setting up a scheme similar to provident fund for the benefit
millions of expatriate workers in the UAE, Emirates 24|7 can
reveal.
Under its Employee Savings Programme (ESP), National Bonds
Corporation (NBC), a wholly owned subsidiary of the Investment Corporation of
Dubai, said it offers tailor-made plans that allow employers to contribute
equally or a percentage of their employee’s contribution to the 'PF'
scheme.
It believes this will allow employers to retain and attract
talent and promote financial awareness among employees.
“When the
memorandum of understanding (master agreement) is negotiated with the employer,
the option of a matching contribution is presented. The amount the employer
would commit to the plan is flexible starting from one per cent to a 100 per
cent in cases of executives and high ranking officers,” a NBC spokesperson
said.
The ESP concept was established to allow employees of companies and
organisations decide a predetermined percentage of their monthly income to be
deducted at source and funds deposited in their respective account.
NBC,
licensed and regulated by the UAE Central Bank, has currently more than 70,000
employees of Dubai Government enrolled in the ESP scheme.
The National
Bureau of Statistics data reveals that expats account for 88.5 per cent of the
UAE’s population of 8.2 million (2011). However, there is no pension scheme in
the UAE similar to Singapore’s Central Provident Fund and Hong Kong’s Mandatory
Provident Fund.
In September, Emarat Al Youm newspaper reported that the
International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (World Bank) had
recommended the establishment of a pension fund for expatriate employees in
Dubai.
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