SSS eyes mandatory OFW coverage

BALANGA CITY, Bataan – The Social Security System said it is asking the help of lawmakers to implement the mandatory coverage of Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs) following its goal to expand its members’ coverage while providing security protection for the country’s new heroes.

According to SSS Central Luzon Senior Communication Analyst Maureen Inocencio, SSS President and Chief Executive Officer Emmanuel F. Dooc said, the shift to mandatory OFW coverage is one of the provisions of the proposed charter amendment the pension fund is pushing in the legislative stage.

“Our objective is not just to strengthen enforcement of compliance for the coverage of employers and employees in the private sector, but also to encourage self-employed individuals and voluntary members like OFWs to register and be active in the system”, she quoted the agency president.

Latest data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed that OFW statistics stood at 2.4 million as of 2016. Of this number, about only 20 percent are paying-members of the SSS or about 500,000 OFWs, with contributions reaching P4.64 billion.

This number, however, represents only 13 percent of the estimated 3.84 million Filipinos working on temporary status abroad, as per latest data of the Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO).

Inocencio said Dooc emphasized that the mandatory coverage of OFWs would increase the number of members of the pension fund on the back of SSS’ efforts for universal coverage.

SSS has disbursed P779 million in benefits to OFWs in 2016. These include initial and lump sum benefits for retirement, death, (funeral with grant) and disability, and short-term benefits for sickness and maternity (for female workers).

“We are pushing for our OFWs to be covered on a mandatory basis in order to secure their basic safety net in time of contingencies. Their SSS contributions are essentially a form of long-term savings for the future, especially when they decide to return home and retire. Even those OFWs covered by their host countries may also end up not being entitled to social security benefits, or entitled but with significant reduction in amounts, because they cannot satisfy the long qualifying periods or the strict residency and immigration rules imposed by their schemes there,” Dooc further explained according to her.

She said the SSS official explained that Filipino migrant workers are often excluded from coverage under the social security schemes of their host countries, whose applicable laws and regulations provide only for the protection of their own nationals.

Inocencio said Dooc also shared the reality that many OFWs, while registered as existing SSS members because of previous work in the Philippines, have stopped contributing since they migrated abroad, but when already in need, they would then regret being remiss in their financial planning and failing to qualify for the full range of SSS benefits, particularly for long-term contingencies such as retirement.

“In the continuing recognition of the invaluable role of our OFWs, it is imperative upon the SSS, as an agent of the State, to ensure their access and eligibility to social security protection during the entire cycle of their migration, through their mandatory coverage under the SSS program,” she quoted the SSS president.