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Why Is Modi Chipping Away At EPFO?

October 04, 2021 09:54 IST

Will the EPFO be required to deduct tax at source or will the employee have to calculate the tax and pay it separately? asks Harsh Roongta.

Illustration: Dominic Xavier/Rediff.com
 

The interest payable by the Employees Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) on provident fund contributions by the employee of more than Rs 2.5 lakh per year is now taxable.

The income-tax department went ahead and notified rules requiring the EPFO to separate the accounting for all contributions made in an employee's PF account till March 31 and thereafter to separately account for employees' contribution below Rs 2.5 lakh.

There has been complete silence from the EPFO on how it is going to deal with this issue and whether it has systems to deliver what the department requires.

An example will help illustrate the concerns.

Suppose an employee has a basic pay of Rs 72 lakh per year and s/he has chosen to have the PF to be calculated on the full basic.

The employee will contribute Rs 8.64 lakh (12 per cent of basic) and the employer an equal sum.

From 2021-2022, interest payable on Rs 6.14 lakh (Rs 8.64 lakh minus Rs 2.5 lakh) is taxable and needs to be shown separately by the EPFO.

It's still not clear who will pay the tax and when.

Will the EPFO be required to deduct tax at source or will the employee have to calculate the tax and pay it separately? There is always suspense on the interest rate that is payable for the year.

Very few employees are aware that they can opt out of the EPF system if their basic is more than Rs 15,000 per month.

This option is available only in your first job.

If you enter the EPFO in your first job, you cannot leave it (if you work for an employer with PF facilities).

The EPFO has come up with a chakravyuh that even Dronacharya cannot match.

Another important issue is the ability to restrict your contribution to Rs 1,800 per month (which is 12 per cent of Rs 15,000 cited above).

In the good old days when the EPF interest was tax-free, most employees chose to contribute 12 per cent of their full basic without restricting it to Rs 1,800 per month.

It is not entirely clear if having chosen to contribute on the full basic whether s/he can later restrict the contribution to Rs 1,800 per month or less.

Ideally, the employee should have the flexibility to contribute any amount s/he wishes, now that there is a cap on tax-free interest.

S/he must also be free to vary her/HIS contribution, subject to a statutory minimum of Rs 1,800 per month.

In the same example, the employer needs to contribute Rs 8.64 lakh per annum to match the employee's contribution.

Of this, Rs 1.14 lakh will be taxable as perks in the employee's hands since Budget 2020 made the employer contribution of more than Rs 7.5 lakh taxable.

The government has been steadily chipping away at the benefits enjoyed by the EPFO.

But the government seems entirely helpless at getting the EPFO to turn into a modern fund management institution like the National Pension System (NPS).

The EPFO has steadfastly stonewalled any attempts at allowing mobility between the EPFO and NPS.

It's like the Communist regime in East Europe building the Berlin Wall to keep their citizens prisoners.

The late Arun Jaitley had remarked in his Budget 2015 speech: 'Both EPF and Employees' State Insurance have hostages, rather than clients'.

Truth be told, if the government only enforces mobility between the EPFO and NPS, the subscribers will settle the argument by voting with their feet.

Harsh Roongta heads Fee-Only Investment Advisors LLP, a Sebi-registered investment advisor.

Feature Presentation: Aslam Hunani/Rediff.com

Harsh Roongta
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