Times of India reports:
Budget 2016: A 25-year-old could lose 18% of retirement income
TNN | Mar 2, 2016, 02.52 AM IST
I's not about paying more in new taxes, which middle-class India has been doing year after year. You just have to count the number of new cesses introduced in the last decade to be sure of this. It's also not about giving up subsidies, which Indians have begun to do rather speedily—the latest example being the surrender of 7.5 million LPG connections in little over a year.
The rage over the new tax on withdrawal from employees' provident fund (EPF) is because the government is seen to be attempting to steal the hard-earned savings of salaried private sector employees. Unlike government employees, private sector workers do not have guaranteed pension or healthcare plan to take care of their sunset years.
Ever since news of the EPF tax broke, people have been worrying about how much of an impact it will have on their nest egg. TOI did the calculations and as the table above shows, if the government goes ahead with the tax on the interest accrued on PF contributions after April 2016, a person starting his career after this could lose 18% of his entire retirement savings at provident fund maturity. Even those in the middle of their career face the prospects of losing between Rs 10 lakh and Rs 20 lakh (12% to 8%) of their retirement corpus.
All this to nudge people towards the National Pension System (NPS) which has failed to get the number of subscribers it expected to because the scheme does not generate as high post-tax returns as the EPF does. By taxing 60% of the interest on EPF withdrawal—if it is not invested in annuity — the government is attempting to make it less attractive for people so that more investment flows into the NPS.
A better way to mend the EPF could have been to fix the dysfunctional employees' pension scheme (EPS), which is a part of EPF. Every EPF member mandatorily contributes towards EPS, but the scheme is designed so badly that the monthly pension cannot exceed Rs 4,000 — an amount that won't equal even 1% of the lastdrawn total monthly salary in many cases.
Times View
The proposal to tax part of the corpus of provident funds on withdrawal needs to be rolled back completely. The salaried middle class has consistently borne the brunt of direct taxation in India and it is unfortunate that instead of making a serious and concerted effort to widen the net, successive governments have opted to squeeze honest taxpayers at every available opportunity.
The latest proposal amounts to double taxation, since the employee's PF contribution is in any case not tax exempt beyond the 80C ceiling of Rs 1.5 lakh per annum.
The rage over the new tax on withdrawal from employees' provident fund (EPF) is because the government is seen to be attempting to steal the hard-earned savings of salaried private sector employees. Unlike government employees, private sector workers do not have guaranteed pension or healthcare plan to take care of their sunset years.
Ever since news of the EPF tax broke, people have been worrying about how much of an impact it will have on their nest egg. TOI did the calculations and as the table above shows, if the government goes ahead with the tax on the interest accrued on PF contributions after April 2016, a person starting his career after this could lose 18% of his entire retirement savings at provident fund maturity. Even those in the middle of their career face the prospects of losing between Rs 10 lakh and Rs 20 lakh (12% to 8%) of their retirement corpus.
All this to nudge people towards the National Pension System (NPS) which has failed to get the number of subscribers it expected to because the scheme does not generate as high post-tax returns as the EPF does. By taxing 60% of the interest on EPF withdrawal—if it is not invested in annuity — the government is attempting to make it less attractive for people so that more investment flows into the NPS.
A better way to mend the EPF could have been to fix the dysfunctional employees' pension scheme (EPS), which is a part of EPF. Every EPF member mandatorily contributes towards EPS, but the scheme is designed so badly that the monthly pension cannot exceed Rs 4,000 — an amount that won't equal even 1% of the lastdrawn total monthly salary in many cases.
Times View
The proposal to tax part of the corpus of provident funds on withdrawal needs to be rolled back completely. The salaried middle class has consistently borne the brunt of direct taxation in India and it is unfortunate that instead of making a serious and concerted effort to widen the net, successive governments have opted to squeeze honest taxpayers at every available opportunity.
The latest proposal amounts to double taxation, since the employee's PF contribution is in any case not tax exempt beyond the 80C ceiling of Rs 1.5 lakh per annum.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/budget-2016/you-and-taxes/A-25-yr-old-could-lose-18-of-retirement-income/articleshow/51217019.cms
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