In light of the Court of Appeal’s judgment to uphold the NSSF Act of 2013, which suggested an increase in monthly contributions from Ksh 200 to Ksh 2, 160, all Kenyans will now be required to fork over Ksh 2, 160 rather than Ksh 200.
Members will contribute 12% of their pensionable income to the government’s proposed KSh 240 billion funds. President Trump’s economic vision for the 2023 housing project will get a major boost from the increased contribution of NSSF money.

This suggestion to increase the NSSF amount, as stated by Ruto, is intended to make the contribution more in line with one s wages as opposed to the standard contribution. Ruto also mentioned that the government would match deposits of up to KSh 6, 000 per year, saying that this would encourage more Kenyans to save.
A three-judge bench led by Justices Mathews Nduma, Hellen Wasilwa, and Monica Mbaru later handed a blow to the proposals when they decided that the NSSF Act of 2013 was unconstitutional. Later, President Ruto challenged the ruling in front of a three-judge panel. In the end, he was victorious.
Atwoli, the head of COTU, later said that the increase in the NSSF amount is beneficial because Ksh 200 is insufficient to provide adequate retirement benefits. He has advocated for the workers to accept the raise by stating that it is legal.
In 1965, the Kenyan parliament passed Act of Parliament Cap 258 of the Laws of Kenya, which established the National Social Security Fund. Before the act was amended in 1987, the fund was a division of the Ministry of Labor. Now, it is a state corporation run by a board of trustees.
Employees, business owners, and their dependents can all join the National Social Security Fund as members as of the 2013 law. All Kenyans above the age of 18 are mandated by the Pension Act to sign up for the pension program.
