Business Standard

EPFO revises payroll figures down by 12% for Sep-May

- SOMESH JHA

The net enrolment numbers released by the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on has been revised down by 12.4 per cent for the September-May period, from an earlier estimate of 4.5 million to 3.9 million.

The net enrolment numbers released by the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on (EPFO) has been revised down by 12.4 per cent for the September-May period, from an earlier estimate of 4.5 million to 3.9 million.

The payroll count in June rose by 24 per cent to 793,308. The net enrolment numbers for June were the highest since September 2017. In May, the payroll numbers had grown by 10 per cent to 638,653.

The payroll count is essentiall­y the difference between the number of workers who joined and exited from the EPFO’s fold.

All employees who work in establishm­ent hiring at least 20 workers contribute towards provident fund and pension, managed by the EPFO. The Union government has been citing this data since past few months as an indication for job growth in the economy.

During a debate on the no-confidence motion, Prime Minister Narendra Modi had claimed that over 10 million jobs were created in the country in past one year, quoting the payroll data released by EPFO, along with other proxy datasets.

The government started releasing the payroll data since April this year for the period beginning September 2017. The payroll has been revised downwards for each of the nine months between September 2017 and May this year. The downward revision is in the range of 5-27 per cent in these months.

“The data is provisiona­l as updates of employees records is a continuous process and it gets updated in subsequent months,” said the EPFO. The estimates released by the EPFO may include temporary employees, “whose contributi­ons may not be continuous for the entire year.”

“The problem with this data is the late filing of return and late reporting of a change in employment by employers to the EPFO,” a senior government official said, adding, “Not all the new EPFO subscripti­ons mean creation of employment.”

The government has temporaril­y discontinu­ed releasing the Quarterly Employment Survey by the Labour Bureau, under the Ministry of Labour and Employment, and has formed a committee to look into the relevance of the survey.

The committee formed under former chief statistici­an T C A Anant is mandated to suggest whether the QES should be abolished or not, “especially with the publishing of payroll data.” The committee is expected to submit its report next month.

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