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Pension

3 Pension Funds Planning To Offer Pension With Health Cover Benefit In NPS: PFRDA

The retirement-focused National Pension System (NPS) will soon offer a health insurance benefit to its subscribers. The PFRDA chairperson, S Ramann, informed that three pension funds, including ICICI, Axis, and Tata, are working on it and would be introducing such bundled plans soon

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NPS will soon have health cover benefit along with pension Photo: AI
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Under the NPS Swasthya scheme, 30 per cent of the corpus is set aside for medical expenses only.

  • Three Pension Funds are working to launch a medical pension bundled product.

  • Tie-ups with insurance companies would yield cheap top-ups and instant hospital payments.

Pension Fund Regulatory And Development Authority (PFRDA) Chairman S Ramann on Friday said three pensions funds are working on introducing plans bundled with health covers for the benefit of investors. The health covers may come either through tie-ups with health insurance companies or also with healthcare providers, Ramann told reporters here.

Explaining the new pensions scheme Swasthya idea, under which the offerings are being planned, Ramann said, "Our aim is to try and get people to understand that they have to protect themselves. We want them to save money in a medical pension scheme. And it is dedicated for payment to medical purposes only." It can be noted that the PFRDA had launched the Swasthya platform in January this year with this intent. As per the scheme, up to 30 per cent of an investor's money can be set aside for covering medical expenses during the period of a pension plan.

Ramann said aggregation of investors is among the biggest of the advantages that NPS offers, which allows pensions funds to negotiate better deals while making some health covers available for investors.

This may also include cheaper top-ups from health insurance companies, which will be over and above the 30 per cent amount that is set aside, he said, adding that hospitals will also be able to give better deals for treatments because of the high volumes.

Healthcare facilities will also get their money immediately after treating a patient, which is unlike a central government health scheme which take months to release payments.

Ramann named pension funds sponsored by ICICI, Axis, and Tatas as ones conducting "experiments" on launching such a coverage right now, and added that he expects ICICI to come up with a final product for customers soon.

The PFRDA chief also said efforts are underway to study how double-digit returns can be sustained over longer periods of time, and added that investments in asset classes like project finance and real estate will also be undertaken.

He expects the maiden pension fund investment into an alternative investment fund to happen before the end of March, and added that this is part of the mandate to invest up to 5 per cent in alternative avenues.

Investments in gold and silver exchange-traded funds will be part of that and not exceed over 1 per cent levels, he said.

At least four banks, or consortium of banks, have evinced interest to get into pension fund business after the PFRDA allowed such a move, he said, adding that this includes Axis Bank and a consortium of Union Bank of India, Indian Bank, and Star Daichi.

Admitting that the NPS coverage is dismally low at just 1 crore people, Ramann said the PFRDA is in talks with the National Payments Corporation of India for help in investor acquisition.

The NPCI-run unified payments interface is used by over 800 million people who have done KYC with a bank, and having acquisition possibilities through the third party application providers, he said, stressing that this can help ensure digital onboarding.

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