Hindustan Times (Noida)

PF tax ceiling will be applicable to GPF as well: CBDT chairman

- Rajeev Jayaswal rajeev.jayaswal@htlive.com

NEW DELHI: The Budget provision that makes interest on employee contributi­ons exceeding ₹2.5 lakh a year to the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) taxable will also be applicable to all government employees covered by the General Provident Fund (GPF), Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) chairman Pramod Chandra Mody said.

Budget 2021-22 has rationalis­ed tax-free income on provident fund contributi­on by high income earners by making the exemption on interest income earned on annual contributi­on to ₹2.5 lakh applicable to all provident funds, Mody said in an interview.

“Everybody is covered, even GPF [General Provident Fund]. This is also applicable to government officials, including me. The law is equal for everybody,” Mody said.

India has three main provident funds—employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) for the organised sector, GPF for government employees and Public Provident Fund (PPF) for all resident Indians.

According to the Central Board of Direct Taxes chairman, the new provision, which will be applicable for contributi­ons made from April 1, 2021, would not affect most provident fund subscriber­s. “If we see total number of beneficiar­ies in this [PF] segment, then most of them are within the ₹2.5 lakh limit. Only a small section of taxpayers makes annual contributi­ons above ₹2.5 lakh,” he said.

“You must also see from the other perspectiv­e that there are cases where contributi­ons are very high... There must be some differenti­ation for such contributo­rs,” he added.

The government is yet to notify the way interest will be computed, said Naveen Wadhwa, deputy general manager at Taxmann, an online source of research on tax matters:

“Possibly, the obligation to compute the interest shall be on the EPFO and it will be subject to TDS [tax deducted at source] under Section 192A or 194A,” he said.

The Employees’ Provident Fund Organisati­on (EPFO) is the world’s largest social security organisati­ons, which claims to maintain 193.4 million accounts.

“The Finance Bill 2021 has proposed to tax the interest accrued on statutory provident fund and recognised fund to the extent it relates to the contributi­on made by an employee in excess of ₹2.5 lakh the previous year. Such interest should be charged to tax under the head ‘Other Sources’ [of income], at the applicable slab rates, based on the method of accounting regularly followed by the assessee,” he said.

A provident fund expert said on condition of anonymity that most employees contributi­ng more than ₹2.5 lakh annually will fall under the 30% tax slab, which would significan­tly reduce returns from the retirement fund.

“This will force high income people to look for other investment options such as the equity market or New Pension Scheme,” he said.

On direct tax collection, Mody expressed confidence that the ₹9.05 lakh crore target, as per the revised estimate (RE) for 2020-21, will be achieved.

“There was a lull in economic activities due to the [Covid-19] pandemic, which is now over. Things are normal now. The gap [in revenue collection] that was there in the last three months has narrowed to almost a single digit. My net collection as on date is ₹6.64 lakh crore, and this is after giving 7% more refunds [compared to the previous year],” he said.

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