Dd. 32855 Ed (4200)
1
JHey Kong
il
caclusively)
Lest you should
think
that I am
Z speaking inĽhypo-
thetical terms, the present Chief Justice who is due to retire in 1970, will, if he lives that long, have
NOTHING TO BE WRITTEN IN THIS MARGIN
Pensions
4. The maximum pension for any Governor is limited by Section 3 of the Governors' Pensions Act 1957, Sub-section (1) of which has been amended, under the provisions of Sub-section (3), by Statutory Instrument No. 1217 of 1964.
The provisions of these two, read together, are that a Governor's maximum pension shall be two-thirds of the yearly amount of the highest salary he has ever received or £5,100, whichever
is the less. We have now reached in respect
of Hong Kong the anomalous position in which
the Colonial Secretary could, if he reached his
maximum entitlement, retire on a pension of £5,800 per annum, which is the substantial
no less thann
sum of £700 per annum more than his Governor
earned and be drawing could possibly draw. The eldfashioned mystiquem ш a pension of ne-lees
than £5,760.
Ser
red fre
kes
› Cene the mendment of
maximum necessary
the maximum
from which this [figure of £5,100 was computed was based on allowing a Governor not more than
two-thirds of the salary of a Permanent Secretary
in the Home Civil Service. The habit has also
Statutory
grown up latterly of not publishing statu Instruments to amend the Governors' Pensions Act 1957 except when a Governor dies or retires. On this basis, the salary of a run-of-the-mill Permanent Secretary in the Home Civil Service having gone up to £8,600, it would be normal practice to expect that you would be automatically ready at the appropriate time to publish a
Statutory Instrument raising the figure of £5,100
to £5,733. This would, however, not quite get
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