SOCIETY: THE CRUELLEST CUT OF ALL
On the road leading to Numaish Chowrangi in Karachi, a small office with the dark green logo of National Savings Centre (NSC) can be spotted from afar. It is the first week of the month and the NSC office is crowded with people — mostly old, feeble and some barely able to walk. They are all waiting their turn to receive the monthly income on their savings.
As I try to weave my way to the front office to have a word with the manager, an elderly lady with a walking stick looks at me with reproach, suspecting that I am trying to jump the queue. An old man mumbles as he leaves the counter still counting currency notes in his wrinkled hand. A clerk buries his face in the ledger as he tells the next lady in line the amount she will receive on her Behbood Saving Certificates (BSC). The information is met by an outburst of anger and the jeers at the manager, Aftab Durrani. However, Durrani seems unfazed. He tells me he’s used to being loathed after working at the NSC for so many years.
And as such there is good reason for senior citizens to be angry: formally a refuge for pensioners, senior citizens and widows, NSC is no longer offering enough returns to them to meet their expenses. The manager admits that things have taken a turn for the worse after former finance minister Shaukat Aziz (1999-2004) decided to tap the cheapest source of borrowings for the government through Treasury Bills and Pakistan Investment Bonds.
Pensioners have been the most affected by cuts to returns on National Saving schemes
Aziz slashed the returns on National Savings Schemes (NSS) without a thought for the voiceless pensioners and widows. Aziz started slashing the rates, which have since been revised downwards every six months or at the government’s whim.
Durrani also points that although the profit payment date is the first of every month, many elderly people arrive a day or two earlier and only to be sent back home.
THE CASE OF THE FOREVER SHRINKING SAVINGS
As he patiently waits for his turn, a gentleman sits on a crowded bench and tells me how he saw his income being ‘vanished’. He owns BSCs which were initially launched for widows, and later included senior citizens above the age of 60. “The BSCs were supposed to offer the highest returns. Eight years ago — till June 2009 — the certificates provided 1,342 rupees on an investment of 100,000 rupees,” he complains. “That return has gradually evaporated by 42 percent. Now you get just 780 rupees on the same investment amount.”
The Monthly Income Certificate, an alternative to BSCs, was once a reliable source of monthly income as well. While only widows and retirees can invest up to five million rupees in Behbood, Monthly Income Certificates are open for all to invest in.
Like the BSC, the profit on the Monthly Income Certificates too has reduced: from 1,133 rupees per month eight years ago to 545 rupees currently. Such a meagre amount is scarcely enough to pay the grocery bill, let alone other expenses including medical bills which can be very high for senior citizens. Even commercial banks, another option, offer a similar rate to the current government certificates on long-term savings accounts and certificates.
This decrease in monthly profits has hit senior citizens and widows (who have lost their breadwinners) particularly hard. With no social security safety net, the situation is critical for this segment of society —at least for those who haven’t worked in the government.