From 1 Mar 1986 to 30 June 1999, the formula to compute the calculated rate is 50% fixed deposit rate and 50% savings rate of the average of the big 4 local banks over the preceding relevant 6 months.
From 1 July 1999 to present, the formula to compute the calculated rate is 80% fixed deposit rate and 20% savings rate of the average of the major local banks over the preceding relevant 3 months.
From 1 Jan 2008, savings in the Special, Medisave and Retirement Accounts is pegged to the 12-month average yield of the 10-year Singapore Government Securities (10YSGS) plus 1%.
Current fixed deposit rates are 0.21% and 10 year SGS rates is 1.93%. If you look at the document, the government have been giving us more than the benchmark They are following
CPF in their eyes is meant to be risk free savings and not for retirement. Hope this address the narrative.
[CPF Rates]
- New 6-Month Singapore T-Bill Yield in Late-April 2024 to Drop to 3.70% (for the Singaporean Savers) - April 18, 2024
- Golden Nuggets from JPMorgan Guide to Retirement 2024. - April 16, 2024
- Be Less Reliant on Banks and Build Stronger Capital Markets by Pushing for Better Shareholder Dividend and Buyback Yield - April 14, 2024
Hahahha
Thursday 5th of June 2014
Hahahha risk free savings is moot if you don't get to see your savings because of minimum sum.
Kyith
Thursday 5th of June 2014
hi, are you sure you won't see your savings?