Business Standard

30-40% of EPFO data ‘unclean’: Ghosh & Ghosh

Out of around 80 million accounts analysed, 10 million had only names and no other details

- SOMESH JHA writes

A presentati­on made by SB I Chief Economist Sou my aK anti G hos hand I I M-Bangalore professor P ula kG ho sh to the Prime Minister’ s Office in January captured how the subscriber data was shoddily maintained by the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on —something that the recently released study on creating 7 million jobs in 2017-18 did not include.

A presentati­on made by State Bank of India Chief Economist Soumya Kanti Ghosh and Indian Institute of Management-Bangalore professor Pulak Ghosh to the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) in January captured how subscriber data is shoddily maintained by the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on (EPFO) — something that the recently released study on creation of seven million jobs in 2017-18 did not include.

Out of around 80 million accounts that the two researcher­s analysed, there were 10 million records with only names and no other details about the subscriber­s, including their date of joining, date of birth and father’s name, among others, in the EPFO’s records. Several records maintained by the EPFO had names such as A, a, xxx, 9, z, with provident fund contributi­on against them.

Ghosh and Ghosh briefed these facts to the PMO in a presentati­on made four days before making their report, Towards a Payroll Reporting in India, was made public on January 16. Top officials from the NITI Aayog, finance ministry, labour and employment ministry and the Ministry of Statistics and Programme Implementa­tion were present at the meeting.

The slides in the presentati­on, Navigating Through Numerous Challenges in EPFO Data, were not part of the study that was released last month. The presentati­on was reviewed by Business Standard.

Only 20 per cent of the members had Permanent Account Numbers (PANs) and there was “no consistenc­y in capturing the members’ data with some or the other details of the subscriber­s missing, that made it really difficult to remove duplicates,” Ghosh and Ghosh told the PMO. “(It) looks like there is 30-40 per cent of unclean data. Only few remain useful with all the fields populated,” according to the presentati­on.

The EPFO has also captured the date of birth inaccurate­ly for several users, showing the members were either over 100 years old or less than 18 years. “Since we cannot identify many members uniquely, we are not sure how many new payrolls are created, or how many are in a job for a while but are being counted as fresh,” Ghosh and Ghosh admitted, estimating that seven million jobs would be added to the payroll in 2017-18.

The EPFO data analysed by the researcher­s also showed that in some cases, members have received contributi­on even before their joining date, “probably due to late registrati­on”, and some members received multiple provident fund contributi­ons for months. “EPFO should do a thorough job of cleaning the entire databases and their systems should be structured,” the researcher­s said during the presentati­on.

The study, however, made it clear that it removed all the accounts where informatio­n was incomplete and also ensured “there was no duplicatio­n by strict name matching across years.” The EPFO gave the NITI Aayog 60 gigabytes of the EPFO database for January 2015 to November 2017, including names, dates of birth, permanent account numbers, provident fund contributi­ons, and industry names. NITI Aayog gave Ghosh and Ghosh access to the database.

EPFO has 184 million subscriber­s in its database, out of which around 40 million members were making active contributi­ons, as on March 31, 2017. Till the end of March 2016, there were around ~408 billion in the inoperativ­e provident fund accounts.

EPFO Central Provident Fund Commission­er VP Joy didn’t respond to a series of questions mailed to him on Monday. However, a senior EPFO official said it used to do manual entry into its system till 2012, after which an electronic challan system was introduced. “It is legacy data that is slowly being cleaned up as we have moved to an electronic recording system. In fact, the database since July last year is even better as we are doing Aadhaar-based verificati­on,” the official said.

However, for Aadhaar-based verificati­on, basic details such as name, father’ s name and date of birth should match with the Aadhaar detail concerned. The EPFO is facing several hurdles in linking provident fund accounts due to the missing details. “Particular­s of some members are missing in their profile i.e. (name, father’s or husband name, date of birth, gender) due to which demographi­c verificati­on is pending…. As a result, the member and employer have to face hard shipto get their A ad ha ar seeded with the UAN,” the EPFO had said in a missive to employers in September last year.

Trade union leaders said workers face hardship due to irregulari­ties on the part of the employers in registerin­g them under the EPFO. “There are workers who are unable to claim the money due to missing details. That is the reason that a huge amount is kept under inoperativ­e accounts. We have been telling the EPFO management that it is not unaccounte­d but belongs to some workers who are not aware about their PF accounts. EPFO needs to identify these workers and keep records electronic­ally, which hasn’t happened in full swing,” Centre of Indian Trade Unions Vice-President and EPFO’s central board of trustees member AK Padmanabha­n said.

Series concludes

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