CHAPTER II Payments into and Collections from Individual Farmers’ Pension Accounts
Article 7
The monthly payments of farmers as stipulated in Article 3, Paragraph 1 shall be calculated as a proportion of the basic wage as announced by the Ministry of Labor.
The payment ratio mentioned in the previous Paragraph shall be decided by farmers within a range of 10%, and shall be an integer.
It will only be after a farmer makes payments into his/her farmers’ pension that the Competent Authority will, based on the amount paid into the farmers’ pension by a farmer, make a similar payment each month.
Monthly payments made by farmers into farmers’ pensions shall not be calculated as taxable income from self-employed farming, fisheries, animal husbandry, forestry, or mining for the year.
Article 8
Farmers who voluntarily begin or cease making payments into farmers’ pensions shall fill out applications and file them with the base level farmers’ association through which they are covered by FHI.
Farmers’ associations that accept applications under the preceding Paragraph shall, on the day that they review whether the applying farmer meets the criteria in Article 3, Paragraph 2 or handle the ceasing of payments, notify the BLI to begin or cease payments to farmers’ pensions.
Article 9
Payment made into a farmers’ pension shall continue from the day such payments begin until one day before the farmer reaches age 65, ceases payments, or withdraws from FHI.
Article 10
Farmers can apply to farmers’ associations in May or November of each year to adjust the payment ratio, and the farmers’ association shall notify the BLI before the end of the month in which the application was received; the adjustment shall take effect from the first day of the month following notification.
Article 11
Payments into farmers’ pensions shall be made monthly through automatic transfer from a financial institution designated by the BLI or using another designated method.
If the BLI has unsuccessfully tried to collect the funds that a farmer shall pay into his/her farmers’ pension for six consecutive months, this will be seen as a voluntary ceasing of payments; in cases in which the farmer applies to begin payments anew, his/her application shall be handled under the provisions of Article 8.
Article 12
Farmers’ associations shall, on the day that a farmer loses his/her qualifications to participate in FHI and withdraws from FHI, make up a list and notify the BLI to cease payments to that farmers’ pension.
The BLI shall calculate the amounts already paid by a farmer starting from the day when the farmer does not meet the qualifying conditions set out in Article 3, Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3, and return this money to the farmer.
Article 13
The BLI shall calculate the amounts already paid by the Competent Authority starting from the day when a farmer does not meet the qualifying criteria set out in Article 3, Paragraph 2 and Paragraph 3, and take back this money out of the individual farmers’ pension account.
For farmers who have already begun to receive benefit from farmers’ pensions, the BLI shall take back one-third of the amount that the farmer is entitled to collect each month from the individual farmers’ pension account until the amount owed is fully repaid. In cases in which it is not possible to take back the money or there is not enough money to take back, the BLI shall use a written order for the farmer to repay the money within a fixed time period; in cases in which a farmer has not repaid the money by the deadline, the case shall be referred for administrative action under the law.
For farmers who die prior to fully repaying what they owe under the previous Paragraph, the BLI shall take back the owed amount in a single payment from the individual farmers’ pension account. In cases in which it is not possible to take back the money or there is not enough money to take back, the BLI shall use a written order for the legal heirs to repay the money within a fixed time period out of the inheritance; in cases in which the heirs have not repaid the money by the deadline, the case shall be referred for administrative action under the law.
Article 14
Farmers who make payments into farmers’ pensions under this Act shall be able to collect their pensions from the time they turn 65 years of age.
Article 15
The calculating method for the amount that a farmer can collect from the farmers’ pension shall be based on the principal and accumulated income in the individual farmers’ pension account, with the amount calculated on the basis of average life expectancy based on the pension life table as well as the interest rate, and shall be paid out each month.
The income from use of the farmers’ pensions as mentioned in the preceding Paragraph shall not be less than the income calculated based on the interest rate of a two-year certificate of deposit at local banks; in cases where the income does not reach this level, the national treasury shall make up the difference.
The calculation of the pension life table, average life expectancy, interest rate, and amounts shall be separately determined by the BLI for the nation, for indigenous people, and for the disabled, and shall be reported to the Competent Authority for approval.
Article 16
Farmers who are not yet 65 years of age can collect the farmers’ pension in the following cases:
1.Those who collect disability payments under the Farmer Health Insurance Act who are determined by their insurer to be unable to continue to do agricultural work.
2.Those who collect disability pension payments under the Farmer Health Insurance Act or have collected the one-time disability payment for Third Level disability or above.
3.Those who collect disability pension payments or disability basic guaranteed pension payments under the National Pension Act.
4.Insured persons who do not fall under the previous three Subparagraphs who are nevertheless disabled in conformance with the previous three Subparagraphs.
In cases in which a farmer applies to collect from his/her farmers’ pension based on the preceding Paragraph, the farmer shall decide the limit to the number of years he/she can collect, and the money shall be disbursed monthly.
For farmers who apply to collect from their farmers’ pensions under Paragraph 1 above and have withdrawn from FHI, in cases where they were able to continue to do agricultural work prior to age 65 and were covered by FHI, they can apply to begin making payments into farmers’ pensions based on this Act, and the period of actual payments shall be recalculated.
Article 17
In cases of a farmer who dies prior to collecting from his/her farmers’ pension, the farmers’ pension shall be collected by the farmer’s heirs or a designated beneficiary in a single payment.
For a farmer who collected payments from his/her farmers’ pension but died before reaching average life expectancy as noted in Article 15, Paragraph 3 or before reaching the limit to the number of years the farmer can collect as noted in the preceding Article, Paragraph 2, the payments from the farmers’ pension shall cease. The remaining amount in the individual farmers’ pension account shall be collected by the heirs of the farmer or a designated beneficiary.
Article 18
The order of priority of heirs for collection of farmers’ pensions as stipulated in the previous Article shall be as follows:
1. Spouses and children
2. Parents.
3. Grandparents.
4. Grandchildren.
5. Siblings.
When there are multiple individuals in the same category of heirs as described in the preceding Paragraph, they shall collectively collect the pension, and in cases where there are unnamed heirs, the heirs who collect the pension shall be responsible for giving them a share. In cases where a potential heir is deceased, has given up the right to collect the pension, or has lost the right of inheritance for a legally defined reason, the remaining heirs shall collect the pension. However, in cases where the farmer, while still alive, named a designated collector in a will, the will shall be followed.
After a farmer dies, the principal and accumulated income in the individual farmers’ pension account shall, in any of the following situations, be transferred to the farmers’ pension fund:
1. There are no heirs as described in Paragraph 1 nor is there any designated collector.
2. The right to apply to collect the farmers’ pension of the heirs as described in Paragraph 1 or of a designated collector has lapsed because of time limitations.
Article 19
When farmers or their heirs or designated collectors apply to collect farmers’ pensions, they shall fill out an application form and attach relevant documents and turn these over to the farmers’ association stipulated in Article 8, Paragraph 1 for application to be made to the BLI; the contents of the application form and relevant documents as well as the application process shall be stipulated by the BLI.
In cases where the application process has been completed and it has been determined that the farmers’ pension shall be paid out, the BLI shall begin payments before the end of the month following receipt of the application.
The right of heirs or a designated collector as described in Paragraph 1 to apply to collect the farmers’ pension shall lapse if it is not exercised for a ten-year period starting from the day that they are allowed to apply.
Article 20
Farmers’ pensions, and the right of farmers or their heirs or designated collectors to collect farmers’ pensions, shall not be the objects of transfer, mortgage, offset, or security.
Farmers who collect farmers’ pensions under the stipulations of this Act, can show their identification document issued by the BLI to set up a special account in a financial institution specially for deposit of the farmers’ pension.
The deposits into the special accounts mentioned in the preceding Paragraph shall not be used as objects of offset, mortgage, security, or compulsory execution.
Article 21
Farmers’ associations that do not, under Article 8, Paragraph 2, Article 10, or Article 12, Paragraph 1, notify the BLI that payments are being made into a farmers’ pension, that the payment ratio is being adjusted, or that payments into a farmers’ pension are being ceased, shall be responsible for compensation in cases in which the farmer incurs losses.
The farmer’s right to appeal based on the previous Paragraph shall lapse if it is not exercised within two years after the farmer becomes aware of incurring losses; the same shall apply if the right is not exercised within five years of losses occurring.