Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

INTEREST RATE ON PF DEPOSITS CUT

LOWER RETURNS Rate lowest in 5 years; best move in “current uncertain” market conditions: Govt

- Prashant K Nanda prashant.n@livemint.com ■

NEW DELHI: Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on (EPFO) has lowered the rate of interest on provident fund to 8.55% for its over six crore subscriber­s for 2017-18, from 8.65% in the previous fiscal. “We paid 8.65% last fiscal, which left a surplus of ~695 crore. This year, we have decided to recommend 8.55% for 2017-18, which will leave a surplus of ~586 crore,” labour minister Santosh Gangwar said after the EPFO’s trustees meet.

NEWDELHI: The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on (EPFO), India’s retirement fund manager, cut the interest rate it pays to more than 50 million subscriber­s to 8.55% for the year to March 31, the lowest in five years.

The labour ministry-controlled retirement fund manager had paid 8.65% the previous year. The cut, announced after a meeting of the central board of trustees (CBT) on Wednesday, was the best the body could offer in the “current uncertain” market conditions, labour secretary M Sathiyavat­hy told reporters.

The decision could prove politicall­y problemati­c for the Bharatiya Janata Party-led government as it may anger the vocal middle class, a point that employee representa­tives on the EPFO board told central government representa­tives at the retirement fund body. Labour minister Santosh Kumar Gangwar, who heads the body’s central board, said that the interest rate payout was cut because of low returns from debt investment­s. Although the pension fund manager realized more than ₹1,000 crore in capital gains by selling off a part of its equity exposure, the earnings were not enough to offer a higher interest rate or even match that of the previous year.

“Last year, after we paid an interest rate of 8.65%, EPFO had a surplus of ₹695 crore and this year, after we reached a rate of 8.55%, the surplus was ₹586 crore,” Gangwar said, indicating that strained finances were the reason behind a lower payout. Debt investment­s earned EPFO less than 8% return in the current fiscal, he said.

When asked why EPFO needs to maintain a surplus worth ₹600 crore, EPFO financial adviser Manish Gupta said pension funds “across the globe need to maintain a health-stabilisin­g fund”.

However, employee representa­tives said that as per earning estimates, an 8.65% interest payout would have still left a surplus of ₹48.42 crore.

“When government does not contribute to the PF of subscriber­s, then why are they reducing the interest rate despite money in their corpus?” asked A K Padmanabha­n, president of the Centre of Indian Trade Unions, a central trade union affiliated to the Communist Party of India (Marxist), and a member of the CBT.

Ashok Singh, a senior leader of the Indian National Trade Union Congress and CBT member, said that when EPFO went to the stock market, the argument was that it would enhance returns for PF subscriber­s. But two-and-ahalf years hence, they have been constantly reducing the rate.

“You will see the employees’ reaction on the ground soon. The government is taking away all options of better earnings for the common man,” said Singh.

The CBT decision will need to be approved by the finance ministry.

Currently, the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on invests 15% of its annual accruals in equities via exchange-traded funds and the remaining 85% in debt instrument­s, including government bonds, private sector bonds and fixed deposits. Since August 2015, when it entered the stock market, the body has invested a little over ₹44,000 crore. As of January-end, its equity investment­s have earned around 16% returns.

Gangwar, however, said that the present Union government seeks to offers maximum benefit to employees. He said that the EPF rate is higher than the Government Provident Fund and Public Provident Fund, which are earning 7.6% interest this quarter.

The minister said that the central board of trustees has decided to amend the EPF Act to add more companies under EPFO and increase social security benefits. Right now, all organised sector establishm­ents and firms deploying 20 or more employees come under EPFO.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India