UPDATE: Peru Sets Up Group To Study Private Pension Funds
27 Octubre 2011 - 1:14PM
Noticias Dow Jones
Peru's finance ministry has set up a working group to study and
design a plan to widen coverage and increase efficiencies in the
nation's private pension fund system.
The working group, which has four months to report back to the
ministry, is made up of representatives from the finance ministry,
the Central Reserve Bank of Peru, the Superintendent of Banking,
Insurance and Pension Funds, Congress and some economists.
In a statement the finance ministry said that although the
private pension system, or AFP, has 4.8 million members, "the
advances in terms of widening the number of persons with coverage
have been modest."
It said that only 20% of the active working population regularly
contributes to their private pension funds.
"It is necessary to improve the private pension funds, with
reforms that permit a widening of coverage and an improvement in
the competitiveness of the private pension system," the ministry
said.
In a broadcast interview Thursday, the president of the
association grouping the private pension funds, Beatriz Merino,
said that the AFPs are ready to participate with the working group
in giving information and in putting into place the results of the
study.
The AFPs manage about 80 billion soles ($29 billion) in their
funds.
President Ollanta Humala's Gana Peru party criticized the AFPs
during the election campaign this year, and at one point proposed
setting up a new government-run pension system. Gana Peru later
dropped that proposal.
The AFPs that operate in Peru are: AFP Horizonte, owned mainly
by Holding Continental and Spain's Banco Bilbao Vizcaya Argentaria
(BBVA, BBVA.MC); AFP Integra, mainly owned by the ING Groep (ING,
INGA.AE); AFP ProFuturo, whose main shareholder is a unit of Bank
of Nova Scotia, (BNS, BNS.T) and AFP Prima, controlled by Peru's
Credicorp Ltd. (BAP, BAP.VL).
-By Robert Kozak, Dow Jones Newswires; 511-221-7050;
peru@dowjones.com