Certificate of status of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation


Pension Fund of the Russian Federation
Pension Fund
Address119991, Moscow, st. Shabolovka, 4
Type of organizationPension Fund
Managers
Chairman of the BoardMaxim Topilin
Base
Resolution of the Supreme Council of the RSFSRDecember 22, 1990
Number of employees109 000 (2018)[1]
Websitepfrf.ru
Media files on Wikimedia Commons

The Pension Fund of the Russian Federation
(abbr. PFR) is a government agency that deals with mandatory social security. Founded on December 22, 1990 by Resolution of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR No. 442-1 “On the organization of the Pension Fund of the RSFSR”[2].

As a state extra-budgetary fund of the Russian Federation, the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation was created for the state management of funds of the pension system and ensuring the rights of citizens of the Russian Federation to pension provision. The budget of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation is approved by the State Duma of the Federal Assembly of the Russian Federation in a separate law, together with the adoption of the Federal budget of the Russian Federation. The share of the Pension Fund's budget in Russia's GDP is 10.8% in terms of income and 10.2% in terms of expenses. The Pension Fund of the Russian Federation pays pensions to over 40 million pensioners[3] and social benefits to 20 million beneficiaries, and maintains personalized records of the pension rights of insured persons[4] - for over 128 million Russian citizens[update data].

Since 2005, there has been a deficit in the pension system, which is covered by transfers from the budget. However, the deficit of the pension system is significantly less than the deficit of the pension fund, due to the transfer to the Pension Fund of social obligations unrelated to the payment of pensions[5]. According to Nikita Krichevsky, until 2005, the Russian pension fund had a budget surplus: in 2003 - 100 billion, in 2004 - more than 66 billion rubles[6][update data].

The total volume of pensions and benefits paid to the Pension Fund for the month in April 2020 amounted to 469.2 billion rubles [7], which is significantly less than pre-reform payments (664.7 billion rubles/month in 2020).

Pension Fund structure

The structure of the Pension Fund includes 8 Directorates in the Federal Districts of the Russian Federation, 83 Branches of the Pension Fund in the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, a branch in Baikonur (Kazakhstan), as well as about 2,500 territorial directorates in all regions of the country. The Pension Fund system employs more than 100,000 workers[7]. The highest body is the Board of the Pension Fund; the Executive Directorate of the Pension Fund is responsible for its executive functions.

In relations with policyholders, insured persons and pensioners, the territorial departments of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation are separate legal entities[8].

Structure[ | ]

The structure of the Pension Fund includes 86 Pension Fund Branches in the constituent entities of the Russian Federation, including the OPFR in Baikonur (Kazakhstan), as well as 2,460 client services in the territorial bodies of the Pension Fund. The Pension Fund system employs more than 100,000 specialists[8]. The highest body is the Board of the Pension Fund; the Executive Directorate of the Pension Fund is responsible for its executive functions.

In relations with policyholders, insured persons and pensioners, the territorial departments of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation are separate legal entities[9].

In May 2020, plans were announced to prepare for giving the Pension Fund the status of a public company. The transition to a public legal form will make it possible to transfer management to a tripartite basis - with the participation of the state, representatives of trade unions and employers. After the reorganization, the Pension Fund will be able to receive additional profit through investments. The same organizational and legal form is planned to be provided to the Federal Compulsory Health Insurance Fund (MHIF) and the Social Insurance Fund (SIF). A change in the legal status of extra-budgetary funds will create the opportunity to merge, in the future, the Pension Fund, the Compulsory Medical Insurance Fund and the Social Insurance Fund into a single state social fund. As a result, a “mega-regulator” may be created that will take over the entire complex of social insurance in Russia[10][11].

Socially significant functions of the Pension Fund

Among the socially significant functions of the Russian Pension Fund[7]:

  • appointment and payment of pensions;
  • accounting of insurance funds received under compulsory pension insurance;
  • assignment and implementation of social payments to certain categories of citizens: veterans, disabled people, disabled people due to military trauma, Heroes of the Soviet Union, Heroes of the Russian Federation, etc.;
  • personalized accounting of participants in the compulsory pension insurance system;
  • interaction with policyholders (employers - payers of insurance pension contributions), collection of arrears;
  • issuance of certificates for receiving maternity (family) capital;
  • payment of maternity capital funds;
  • management of pension system funds;
  • implementation of the Program of state co-financing of voluntary pension savings (56-FZ of April 30, 2008, also known as the “thousand for a thousand” program);
  • since 2010 - administration of insurance funds received under compulsory pension insurance and compulsory medical insurance;
  • since 2010 - the establishment of a federal social supplement to social pensions in order to bring the total income of a pensioner to the pensioner’s subsistence level.

Personalized accounting in the compulsory pension insurance system
Data on the payment by policyholders (employers) of mandatory insurance premiums for an employee, information on insurance (work) experience are reflected on the individual personal account of the insured person, which is maintained by the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation for each officially working citizen of Russia. The procedure for maintaining this personal account is regulated by Federal Law dated April 1, 1996 N 27-FZ (as amended on December 29, 2015) “On individual (personalized) accounting in the compulsory pension insurance system”[4]. Any citizen of the Russian Federation who has a SNILS can check information about the payment of mandatory insurance contributions by his employer on his individual personal account with the Pension Fund of Russia using the Internet portal “Gosuslug”[9].

Contributions - income of the Pension Fund

See also Compulsory social insurance in Russia.
The standard rate of contributions to the Pension Fund is 22% of the organization’s payroll, while contributions are not included in the salaries of individual employees, but are taken into account by the pension fund when maintaining their accounts[10]. These contributions are divided into the insurance part and the funded part of the pension.

Until 2010, contributions to the Pension Fund were taken into account as part of the unified social tax.

From January 1, 2010, the unified social tax was abolished, and instead direct insurance contributions of employers (policyholders) to three extra-budgetary funds were established: the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation, the Federal Compulsory Medical Insurance Fund and the Social Insurance Fund. In 2010, the total volume of insurance contributions will remain at the level of the Unified Social Tax rate - 26%, of which 20% will be directed to the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation (for compulsory pension insurance). In this case, contributions will be paid from annual earnings up to 415 thousand rubles. If annual earnings exceed 415 thousand rubles, contributions in excess of 415 thousand rubles are not collected, but pension rights in excess of this amount are not formed. From 2011, the amount of total contributions will increase to 34%, of which 26% will be contributions for compulsory pension insurance. This system makes it possible to significantly increase the level of pensions in the country. For persons who are fully covered by the insurance system, the coefficient of replacement of wages with a pension with which insurance premiums were paid will be at least 40% after 30 years of paying these contributions upon the occurrence of an insured event (that is, old age, determined by the citizen reaching the age established by law - 55 years for women and 60 years for men).

Also, since 2009, citizens have the opportunity to make voluntary contributions to the funded part of their pension. The law[11] provides for two parties to co-financing a citizen’s contributions - the state (which doubles the amount to at least 2 thousand, but not more than 12 thousand rubles) and the employer (which receives a tax deduction for co-financing employee contributions up to 12 thousand rubles).

Part of the long-term pension provision mechanism for citizens of the Russian Federation is the Russian National Welfare Fund[12]. As of April 2020, according to the Russian Ministry of Finance, the total volume of the fund amounted to 4,134.27 billion rubles (73.33 billion US dollars)[13].

Before transferring funds to management companies and non-state pension funds, the Pension Fund temporarily places them in commercial banks. Thus, according to the results of 2016, he received an income from such investment in the amount of 2.97 billion rubles, which is 10.58% per annum[14].

An excerpt characterizing the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation

“Please listen,” she said to Natasha, with a smile extremely similar to her uncle’s smile. “He plays well for us,” she said. “He’s doing something wrong in this knee,” the uncle suddenly said with an energetic gesture. - Here you need to scatter - it’s a pure matter of march - scatter... - Do you really know how? – Natasha asked. – Uncle smiled without answering. - Look, Anisyushka, are the strings intact or something on the guitar? I haven’t picked it up for a long time - it’s pure marching! abandoned. Anisya Fedorovna willingly went with her light tread to carry out her master’s instructions and brought a guitar. The uncle blew off the dust without looking at anyone, tapped the lid of the guitar with his bony fingers, tuned it and adjusted himself in the chair. He took (with a somewhat theatrical gesture, placing the elbow of his left hand) the guitar above the neck and, winking at Anisya Fedorovna, began not the Lady, but struck one sonorous, clean chord, and measuredly, calmly, but firmly began to finish the famous song at a very quiet pace: Po li and ice pavement. At the same time, in time with that sedate joy (the same one that Anisya Fedorovna’s whole being breathed), the motive of the song began to sing in the souls of Nikolai and Natasha. Anisya Fedorovna blushed and, covering herself with a handkerchief, left the room laughing. Uncle continued to finish the song cleanly, diligently and energetically, looking with a changed, inspired look at the place from which Anisya Fedorovna had left. There was just a little something laughing in his face on one side, under his gray mustache, and he laughed especially when the song progressed further, the beat quickened, and something came off in places where it was too loud. - Lovely, lovely, uncle; more, more,” Natasha screamed as soon as he finished. She jumped up from her seat, hugged her uncle and kissed him. - Nikolenka, Nikolenka! - she said, looking back at her brother and as if asking him: what is this? Nikolai also really liked his uncle’s playing. The uncle played the song a second time. The smiling face of Anisya Feodorovna appeared again at the door and from behind her there were still other faces... “Behind the cold key, she shouts: girl, wait!” Uncle played, made another deft move, tore it off and moved his shoulders. “Well, well, my dear, uncle,” Natasha moaned in such a pleading voice, as if her life depended on it. The uncle stood up and it was as if there were two people in him - one of them smiled seriously at the merry fellow, and the merry fellow made a naive and neat prank before the dance. - Well, niece! - the uncle shouted, waving his hand towards Natasha, tearing off the chord. Natasha threw off the scarf that was draped over her, ran ahead of her uncle and, putting her hands on her hips, made a movement with her shoulders and stood. Where, how, when did this countess, raised by a French emigrant, suck into herself from that Russian air that she breathed, this spirit, where did she get these techniques that pas de chale should have long ago been supplanted? But these spirits and techniques were the same, inimitable, unstudied, Russian ones that her uncle expected from her. As soon as she stood up and smiled solemnly, proudly and slyly with gaiety, the first fear that gripped Nikolai and everyone present, the fear that she would do the wrong thing, passed and they were already admiring her. She did the same thing and did it so accurately, so completely accurately that Anisya Feodorovna, who immediately handed her the scarf she needed for her business, burst into tears through laughter, looking at this thin, graceful, so alien to her, well-bred countess in silk and velvet. , who knew how to understand everything that was in Anisya, and in Anisya’s father, and in her aunt, and in her mother, and in every Russian person. “Well, the countess is a pure march,” the uncle said, laughing joyfully, having finished the dance. - Oh yes niece! If only you could choose a good guy for your hubby, it’s pure business! “It’s already been chosen,” Nikolai said, smiling. - ABOUT? - the uncle said in surprise, looking questioningly at Natasha. Natasha nodded her head affirmatively with a happy smile. - What a great one! - she said. But as soon as she said this, another, new system of thoughts and feelings arose in her. What did Nikolai’s smile mean when he said: “already chosen”? Is he happy about this or not? He seems to think that my Bolkonsky would not approve, would not understand this joy of ours. No, he would understand everything. Where is he now? Natasha thought and her face suddenly became serious. But this only lasted for one second. “Don’t think, don’t dare think about it,” she said to herself and, smiling, sat down next to her uncle again, asking him to play something else. Uncle played another song and a waltz; then, after a pause, he cleared his throat and sang his favorite hunting song. As if the powder fell well in the evening... Uncle sang as the people sing, with that complete and naive conviction that in a song the whole meaning lies only in the words, that the melody comes by itself and that there is no separate melody, and that the melody is just that , for warehouse. Because of this, this unconscious melody, like the melody of a bird, was unusually good for my uncle. Natasha was delighted with her uncle's singing. She decided that she would no longer study the harp, but would only play the guitar. She asked her uncle for a guitar and immediately found the chords for the song. At ten o'clock a line, a droshky and three horsemen sent to look for them arrived for Natasha and Petya. The Count and Countess did not know where they were and were very worried, as the messenger said. Petya was taken down and placed like a dead body in a line; Natasha and Nikolai got into the droshky. Uncle wrapped Natasha up and said goodbye to her with completely new tenderness. He escorted them on foot to the bridge, which had to be forded, and ordered the hunters to go ahead with lanterns. “Farewell, dear niece,” his voice shouted from the darkness, not the one that Natasha knew before, but the one that sang: “Like powder since evening.” The village we were passing through had red lights and a cheerful smell of smoke. - What a charm this uncle is! - Natasha said when they drove out onto the main road. “Yes,” said Nikolai. - Are you cold? - No, I’m great, great. “I feel so good,” Natasha even said with bewilderment. They were silent for a long time. The night was dark and damp. The horses were not visible; you could only hear them splashing through the invisible mud. What was going on in this childish, receptive soul, which so greedily caught and assimilated all the varied impressions of life? How did it all fit into her? But she was very happy. Already approaching the house, she suddenly began to sing the tune of the song: “Like powder since the evening,” a tune that she had been catching all the way and finally caught. - Did you catch it? - said Nikolai. - What were you thinking about now, Nikolenka? – Natasha asked. “They loved asking each other that.” - I? - Nikolai said, remembering; - you see, at first I thought that Rugai, the red male, looked like his uncle and that if he were a man, he would still keep his uncle with him, if not for the race, then for the frets, he would have kept everything. How nice he is, uncle! Is not it? - Well, what about you? - I? Wait, wait. Yes, at first I thought that we were driving and we thought that we were going home, and God knows where we were going in this darkness and suddenly we would arrive and see that we were not in Otradny, but in a magical kingdom. And then I also thought... No, nothing more. “I know, I was right about him,” Nikolai said, smiling, as Natasha recognized by the sound of his voice. “No,” Natasha answered, although at the same time she really was thinking about Prince Andrei, and about how he would like his uncle. “And I keep repeating, I repeat all the way: how well Anisyushka performed, well...” said Natasha. And Nikolai heard her ringing, causeless, happy laughter. “You know,” she suddenly said, “I know that I will never be as happy and calm as I am now.” “This is nonsense, nonsense, lies,” said Nikolai and thought: “What a charm this Natasha is! I don’t have and never will have such another friend. Why should she get married, everyone would go with her!” “What a charm this Nikolai is!” thought Natasha. - A! there’s still a fire in the living room,” she said, pointing to the windows of the house, which shone beautifully in the wet, velvety darkness of the night. Count Ilya Andreich resigned from the leadership because this position was associated with too much expense. But things didn’t improve for him. Often Natasha and Nikolai saw secret, restless negotiations between their parents and heard talk about the sale of a rich, ancestral Rostov house and a house near Moscow. Without a leader there was no need to have such a large reception, and Otradnensky life was conducted more quietly than in previous years; but the huge house and outbuildings were still full of people, and more people still sat down at the table. All these were people who had settled into the house, almost members of the family, or those who, it seemed, had to live in the count’s house. These were Dimmler - a musician with his wife, Yogel - a dance teacher with his family, the old lady Belova, who lived in the house, and many others: Petya's teachers, the young ladies' former governess and simply people who were better or more profitable to live with the count than at home. There was not such a big visit as before, but the course of life was the same, without which the count and countess could not imagine life. There was the same hunting, even increased by Nikolai, the same 50 horses and 15 coachmen in the stable, the same expensive gifts on name days, and ceremonial dinners for the entire district; the same count whists and bostons, for which he, throwing out cards to everyone, allowed himself to be beaten by hundreds every day by his neighbors, who looked at the right to form Count Ilya Andreich’s game as the most profitable lease. The Count, as if in a huge snare, walked about his affairs, trying not to believe that he was entangled and with each step becoming more and more entangled and feeling unable either to break the nets that entangled him or to carefully, patiently begin to untangle them. The Countess felt with a loving heart that her children were going bankrupt, that the Count was not to blame, that he could not be different from what he was, that he himself was suffering (although he hid it) from the consciousness of his own and his children’s ruin, and she was looking for means to help the cause. From her female point of view, there was only one remedy - Nikolai's marriage to a rich bride. She felt that this was the last hope, and that if Nikolai refused the match that she had found for him, she would have to say goodbye forever to the opportunity to improve matters. This party was Julie Karagina, the daughter of a beautiful, virtuous mother and father, known to the Rostovs from childhood, and now a rich bride on the occasion of the death of the last of her brothers.

Performance indicators

Index2010[15]2011[16]2012[17]2013[18]2014[19]2015[20]2016[1]2017[21]
Number of pensioners, million people39,740,240,641,141,4642,742,943,5
Budget revenues of the Pension Fund of Russia, billion rubles4 6005 2565 8906 3886 1597 1277 6268 260
Receipt of contributions for compulsory pension insurance, billion rubles1 9002 8153 0263 4593 6943 8644 1324 482
Receipts from the federal budget, billion rubles2 6402 4002 8002 8402 4103 1003 3553 677
Pension Fund budget expenditures, billion rubles4 2004 9225 4516 3796 1907 6707 8308 319
Pension Fund expenditures on pensions, billion rubles3 7004 0814 5245 2505 4066 2016 4307 167
Pension Fund expenses on maternity capital, billion rubles97,1171,3212,4270,7365312

Content

  • 1 Structure
  • 2 Functions
  • 3 Income (insurance premiums) 3.1 Mandatory deductions
  • 3.2 Voluntary contributions
  • 3.3 Other income
  • 4 Statistics of key indicators
  • 5 Chairmen of the Board
  • 6 Performance evaluation
      6.1 Scandals
  • 6.2 Efficiency and efficiency 6.2.1 Specific number of employees
  • 6.3 Criticism of activities
      6.3.1 Limitation of powers
  • 6.3.2 Own maintenance expenses
  • 7 See also
  • 8 Notes
  • 9 Links
  • Scandals

    In February 2020, the Anti-Corruption Policy Center of the Yabloko party (ACP) discovered a contract according to which the Russian Pension Fund (PFR) will spend 27 million rubles on business trips for employees in 2020 without bidding.[22] In May 2020, the FAS confirmed violations when the Pension Fund spent 150 million rubles on employee business trips.[23]

    Since mid-2020, on the basis of its internal letter (signed by the Deputy Chairman of the Board Liliya Ivanovna Chizhik), the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation has been refusing to provide monthly additional financial support (330% of the social pension) to laureates of the Russian Government awards who retire and stop working . As a result, they find themselves in significantly worse material conditions than the laureates who applied for the bonus earlier and are still receiving it. There were lawsuits initiated by the affected pensioner laureates. Most of them were won[24][25].

    Efficiency and efficiency

    The Russian Pension Fund ranks first in the world in terms of the number of employees: 121,670 people. For example, the number of employees of the Social Security Administration in the United States is more than two times smaller, and the population of the United States is more than twice that of Russia, and the volume of pension and social benefits is almost nine times larger. In Japan, with a population similar to Russia, Nihon Nenkin Kikou employs 27 thousand people, of which only 15 thousand work on a permanent basis[26].

    Professor of the Department of Finance and Prices of the Russian Economic University. G.V. Plekhanova Yulia Finogenova noted that the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation has extremely limited obligations to inform its participants, for example, the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation did not have the obligation to inform clients about possible losses of investment income when changing insurers, as a result, in some years, up to 90% of transitions turned out to be premature, and therefore unprofitable[27]. Due to the lack of full information to the insured person about the loss of investment income, even those who decided to transfer from the Pension Fund of Russia (PFR) to non-state pension funds (NPFs) were “silent” [28] who lost out on an early transfer, since they could have done this with the preservation of income no earlier than 2020 [29].

    The Pension Fund is also known for its involvement in a scandal involving illegal transfers of pension savings from the Pension Fund to NPFs.

    In August 2020, against the backdrop of a discussion of the Draft Law on Pension Reform in Russia, which envisages an increase in the retirement age, Boris Titov, Commissioner under the President of the Russian Federation for the Protection of the Rights of Entrepreneurs, drew attention to the fact that one of the main reasons for the lack of funds for paying pensions in Russia is exorbitant and senseless expenses for the maintenance of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation. The business ombudsman considered the infrastructure of the fund to be costly and unnecessary in the context of the development of information technology, and proposed transferring the functions of the Pension Fund to the Russian Treasury and Multifunctional Centers (MFC). In 2020, the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation employs more than 110 thousand officials to maintain the pension accounts of Russians, the buildings it owns are the most luxurious in all republican capitals and regional centers, and about 1.5% of all pension savings of Russians are spent annually on servicing the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation itself (this is tens of billion rubles). Numerous buildings of the Pension Fund throughout Russia, according to this action plan, should be transferred to the ownership of the constituent entities of the Federation for the organization of centers for training older people in new qualifications. Such measures will allow the state to free up significant reserves for paying pensions without increasing the retirement age[30].

    Notes

    1. 12
      Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    2. Resolution of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR No. 442-1 “On the organization of the Pension Fund of the RSFSR” Archived on January 20, 2013.
    3. Pension Fund of the Russian Federation - In November 2010, there were no failures in the payment of pensions and benefits
    4. 12
      Federal Law “On individual (personalized) registration in the compulsory pension insurance system” dated 01.04.96 N 27-FZ
    5. Nikita Krichevsky: Statements that the Pension Fund of Russia does not have a budget deficit are hypocrisy
    6. Personal blog of Nikita Krichevsky. About Nikita Isaev and the Pension Fund budget deficit
    7. 12
      About the Pension Fund
    8. Participants in legal relations regarding compulsory pension insurance. base.garant.ru. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
    9. Article 16. Rights and obligations of the bodies of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation related to the implementation of individual (personalized) accounting / ConsultantPlus. www.consultant.ru. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
    10. Federal Law of December 15, 2001 N 167-FZ “On Compulsory Pension Insurance in the Russian Federation”
    11. Federal Law of April 30, 2008 N 56-FZ (as amended on July 27, 2010) “On additional insurance contributions for the funded part of the labor pension and state support for the formation of pension savings”
    12. “The Purpose of [NWF]”
    13. National Welfare Fund. Statistics.
    14. At the end of 2020, the Pension Fund increased the pension savings of Russians by 2.97 billion rubles. www.pfrf.ru (April 6, 2017). Retrieved April 18, 2020.
    15. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2010
    16. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2011
    17. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2012
    18. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2013
    19. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2014
    20. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    21. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    22. Inc., TV Rain,
      . Yabloko learned about the Pension Fund's plans to spend 27 million rubles on business trips for employees. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
    23. Inc., TV Rain,
      . FAS found violations when the Pension Fund spent 150 million rubles on business trips for employees. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
    24. “Reckoning with the laureates” // Moscow city branch of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, official website.
    25. The Pension Fund is deceiving the laureates of the Russian Government Prize. trv-science.ru
    26. Fund with more Rating of the most effective and ineffective pension services
    27. “Translation difficulties. Why do citizens lose savings when moving from fund to fund” “Rossiyskaya Gazeta” - Federal issue No. 7339 (173) dated 08/06/2017.
    28. “Pension funds do not let citizens go” Vedomosti, March 19, 2018.
    29. “Pensions are lost during the transition” Newspaper “Kommersant” No. 44 dated March 16, 2018, p. 1.
    30. NEWSru.com, August 2, 2020. The business ombudsman suggested “buying additional” work experience, and paying extra for early retirement

    Notes[ | ]

    1. The pension fund has planned a reduction (unspecified)
      . Vedomosti (March 21, 2018). Retrieved May 24, 2020.
    2. Resolution of the Supreme Council of the RSFSR No. 442-1 “On the organization of the Pension Fund of the RSFSR” Archived on January 20, 2013.
    3. In 2010, there were no interruptions in the payment of pensions and benefits (unspecified)
      .
      www.pfrf.ru.
      _ Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    4. 1 2
      Federal Law of 04/01/1996 N 27-FZ (as amended on 04/01/2019) “On individual (personalized) accounting in the compulsory pension insurance system”
      (undefined)
      .
      www.pfrf.ru.
      _ Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    5. Nikita Krichevsky: Statements that the Pension Fund of Russia does not have a budget deficit are hypocrisy (Russian). www.nakanune.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    6. About Nikita Isaev and the PFR budget deficit (unspecified)
      .
      nkrichevsky.livejournal.com
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    7. RIA Novosti, March 27, 2020. The Pension Fund of Russia financed the payment of pensions and benefits for April ahead of schedule; For information about Pension Fund payments in 2020, see the end of the material (the amount of payments of all types is divided by 12).
    8. 1 2
      About the Pension Fund of Russia
      (unspecified)
      .
      www.pfrf.ru.
      _ Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    9. Participants in legal relations for compulsory pension insurance (undefined)
      . base.garant.ru. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
    10. Yu. Starostina, V. Dergachev.
      The Ministry of Labor has begun preparations for the reform of the Pension Fund
      (unspecified)
      . RBC (May 23, 2019). Retrieved May 24, 2020.
    11. The transformation of the Pension Fund into a public company can be discussed on May 31 (unspecified)
      . TASS (May 23, 2019). Retrieved May 24, 2020.
    12. Article 16. Rights and obligations of the bodies of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation related to the implementation of individual (personalized) accounting (undefined)
      .
      base.garant.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    13. Federal Law of December 15, 2001 N 167-FZ (as amended on December 11, 2018) “On compulsory pension insurance in the Russian Federation” (undefined)
      .
      www.pfrf.ru.
      _ Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    14. Federal Law of April 30, 2008 N 56-FZ “On additional insurance contributions for funded pensions and state support for the formation of pension savings” (as amended and supplemented) (undefined)
      .
      base.garant.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    15. Purpose of the National Welfare Fund (undefined)
      .
      minfin.gov.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    16. NWF statistics (unspecified)
      .
      minfin.gov.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    17. At the end of 2020, the Pension Fund of Russia increased the pension savings of Russians by 2.97 billion rubles (unspecified)
      . www.pfrf.ru (April 6, 2017). Retrieved April 18, 2017.
    18. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2010
    19. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2011
    20. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2012
    21. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2013
    22. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2014
    23. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    24. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    25. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    26. Annual report of the Pension Fund for 2020
    27. Order on the Chairman of the Board of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation
    28. Inc., TV Rain,
      . Yabloko learned about the Pension Fund's plans to spend 27 million rubles on business trips for employees. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
    29. Inc., TV Rain,
      . FAS found violations when the Pension Fund spent 150 million rubles on business trips for employees. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
    30. Communist Party of the Russian Federation Moscow.
      Igor Polyakov. Reckoning with the laureates (Russian). Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    31. The pension fund is deceiving the laureates of the Russian Government Prize (Russian). trv-science.ru
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    32. Medvedev fired the deputy head of the Pension Fund Ivanov due to loss of trust (Russian). RIA Novosti
      (August 20, 2019). Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    33. Fund with more // Kommersant.
    34. About the Federal Register of Disabled Persons (unspecified)
      .
    35. EGISSO portal (undefined)
      . egisso.ru. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
    36. Why pension savings are lost when moving from fund to fund (Russian). Russian newspaper
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    37. Pension funds do not release citizens (Russian). Vedomosti
      . Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    38. Pensions are lost during the transition // Kommersant.
    39. The business ombudsman suggested “buying additional” work experience, and paying extra for early retirement (unspecified)
      .
      NEWSru.com
      (August 2, 2018). Retrieved September 30, 2020.
    40. The head of the Pension Fund spoke about the use of the foundation's buildings (Russian). RIA Novosti (20180925T1319+0300Z). Retrieved April 12, 2020.

    Links

    • Official website of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation

    Pension Fund budget by year

    • BUDGET OF THE PENSION FUND OF THE RF (PFR)
    • Federal Law of December 1, 2014 N 385-FZ “On the budget of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation for 2020 and for the planning period of 2020 and 2020”
    • Putin approved a new three-year budget for the Russian Pension Fund
    • At a meeting of the Russian Government, the execution of the budget of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation for 2014 was approved
    • Federal Law of December 19, 2020 N 416-FZ “On the budget of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation for 2020 and for the planning period of 2020 and 2020”
    • The President of the Russian Federation approved the budget of the Russian Pension Fund for 2016
    • Draft Federal Law No. 94798-5 “On the execution of the budget of the Pension Fund of the Russian Federation for 2007”
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