Mahama Ayariga Wants Retirement Age Extended From 60 To 65

Mahama Ayariga Wants Retirement Age Extended From 60 To 65

 

 

The Member of Parliament for Bawku Central, Mahama Ayariga is advocating for the extension of compulsory retirement age for public servants and judicial officers from 60 to 65 years. Mahama Ayariga announced that he is sponsoring a private member’s bill to amend the constitution to achieve this objective. Many people start

 

family life late and their children are also mostly still in school when they are compulsorily retired and also the family incomes are negatively very much affected with dire consequences for the education of their children. An extended retirement age will ensure that the youth are guaranteed family income and also to sponsor their

 

 

education, he explained. With improved health care and increased life expectancy, the current compulsory retirement age of 60 years hurts the public service and judiciary and denies them of healthy, competent and experienced people. And many of them live an additional twenty years or more and become a burden

 

 

on the pension scheme which has to support them in retirement when they could actually work, the legislator added. Mr. Ayariga made the remark when the Minister-designate for Employment and Labour Relations, Ignatius Baffour Awuah, appeared before Parliament’s Appointments Committee on Wednesday, February 17, 2021. Mahama Ayariga asked the Minister designate

 

 

whether he will support an amendment to constitution to extend the retirement age. In response, Baffour Awuah said he supports the proposal but added that the concerns of young people looking for jobs must be considered. The Minister designate argued that extending the compulsory retirement age will ensure sustainability of the national pension scheme. A national dialogue on the issue of the extension of the compulsory retirement age is encouraged to build a national consensus on the matter, he said.