My Take | MPF doesn't work for the little guy

A fund manager friend calls it the Mandatory Poverty Fund. Most of us call the MPF by its more polite name. But my friend has a point. The way the quasi-pension fund is run now, you are guaranteed a life of penury if you have to live on it after retirement.

Alex Loin Toronto
Hong Kong is probably the only developed economy that allows employers to legally raid such pension accounts to "offset" a worker's severance and long-service payments. Photo: AFP

A fund manager friend calls it the Mandatory Poverty Fund. Most of us call the MPF by its more polite name. But my friend has a point. The way the quasi-pension fund is run now, you are guaranteed a life of penury if you have to live on it after retirement.

In the past decade, the only people who have really been benefited were managers in the banking and fund management industry, for which MPF fees and charges have been a bonanza. And while I admit bosses don't like having to contribute their shares of MPF into workers' accounts, it has not been a complete drag for them.

Print option is available for subscribers only.
SUBSCRIBE NOW
Copyright © 2025 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.