Business Standard

Moving between NPS and EPF isn’t simple ATTRACTIVE RETURNS IN BOTH EQUITY AND DEBT NPS FUNDS

The EPF Act needs to be changed to allow movement between these two schemes; rules of NPS are also more restrictiv­e

- SANJAY KUMAR SINGH Pension fund Scheme E, Tier-I Scheme C, Tier-I Scheme G, Tier-I 1-year 3-year 1-year 3-year 1-year 3-year

Despite the Pension Fund Regulatory and Developmen­t Authority’s (PFRDA’s) attempts to make the National Pension System (NPS) more attractive, things haven’t worked too well, in terms of transfer of Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) subscriber­s to NPS. More than 90 per cent of the subscriber­s are either government employees (who don’t have a choice) or lower income groups who were given a one-time subsidy to enrol. Only five-six per cent of subscriber­s are from the corporate sector. And this developmen­t happened after the amendment that allowed deductibil­ity of employers’ contributi­on of the salary over and above the ~1.5 lakh under Section 80C. The rest, a small percentage of people, invest in NPS for the ~50,000 tax benefit announced in the Finance Bill, 2015.

So, what stops an EPF subscriber to get better returns through NPS? Hemant Contractor, chairman, PFRDA, says with the amendment in the Finance Act, 2016, the one-time transfer of recognised provident fund to NPS was made taxexempt. “But employees who are still working and covered under EPF may not be able to shift to NPS, till the time he continues in the establishm­ent where EPF is mandatory. The shift can happen only when an employee is given the option to choose between EPF and NPS and for this to happen, the EPF Act needs to be amended, providing choice of selecting between EPF and NPS to the employees.”

He said employees who are no more covered under EPF due to various reasons such as leaving a job or shifting to an organisati­on where EPF is not applicable, can request for transfer of the accumulate­d provident fund to NPS, as the income tax Act provides tax exemption on one-time transfer of the accumulate­d provident fund to NPS.

However, the government is taking important steps to aid the movement to NPS. The Finance Act, 2016, amended the Income Tax Act, 1961, so that withdrawal from a recognised provident fund and a superannua­tion fund to transfer to NPS would not attract any tax. The next step was taken in March when PFRDA came out with a circular laying out the road map for individual­s to transfer their money from a provident fund or superannua­tion fund to NPS. But, the ground reality is that those enrolled in EPF still can't shift to NPS.

The primary reason is that the EPF is governed by an Act of Parliament — the Employees’ Provident Fund and Miscellane­ous Provisions Act, 1952. According to sources, there is currently a proposal within the government to allow movement in the reverse direction as well. It has been suggested that if a person is not happy with NPS, she should also be given a one-time option to migrate to the EPF. The good news is that employees whose retirement kitty is in superannua­tion funds, which don't fall under the ambit of the EPF Act, can transfer their corpus to NPS.

Once you have the option, should you shift from EPF to NPS? A person should take into considerat­ion the following factors before making this decision: Risk, return, liquidity, and finally, tax provisions. "If somebody wants assured and stable returns, EPF is a good option. But if he is ready to take more risk to improve returns, he may move to NPS," says Manoj Nagpal, chief executive officer, Outlook Asia Capital.

EPF also offers better liquidity than NPS. After five years of service, if you stop working and there is a gap of two months, you can withdraw the entire corpus. Even while working, you can withdraw up to 90 per cent of the balance (or corpus) for situations such as constructi­ng a house or a child’s marriage. NPS also provides liquidity in similar circumstan­ces, but here you can withdraw only up to 25 per cent of the contributi­on (not the corpus).

Only after you have given thought to the above-mentioned factors should you consider the tax provisions. EPF enjoys exempt-exempt-exempt status while for NPS, the corpus is taxed at withdrawal. In actual terms, the tax impact is limited. “Over a span of 20-30 years, if the NPS gives even marginally superior returns over EPF, the tax impact will get nullified,” says Nagpal. EPFgave returns of8.65% in FY16-17 SBI Pension Funds UTI Retirement Solutions LIC Pension Fund HDFC Pension Management 16.18 10.57 15.02 11.35 9.53 Kotak Mahindra Pension Fund 17.60 11.07 Reliance Capital Pension Fund 16.57 10.27 ICICI Pru Pension Fund Mgmt. 15.75 10.27 19.40 11.29 11.19 11.98 10.98 11.86 10.86 12.04 11.67 12.30 11.32 11.97 11.59 12.51 11.26 12.12 10.14 13.04 9.43 12.46 12.43 13.47 10.22 12.96 10.26 12.99 9.79 12.80 9.70 12.66

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