After Budget 2016-17 proposed taxing 60 per cent of the withdrawal from Employee Provident Fund (EPF) on contributions to be made after April 1, the government yesterday hinted of a partial rollback.
At a meeting organised by industry chambers on Budget provisions, Jaitley said the move was aimed at high-salaried class and not the overwhelming section of 3.7 crore EPF members.
"The revenue department had considered various aspects of the National Pension Scheme and Employee Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO). Their intention is not revenue raising, that was not the principal intention," he said.
"The EPFO has about 3.7 crore members of which about 3 crore members are those in the earning category of Rs 15,000 and below (statutory wages). For them there is no change," he said. "It is only those private sector employees who have just joined that this will impact them."
With the proposal being attacked by various employees unions including RSS-backed BMS and political parties who termed it as "an attack on the working class and a clear case of double taxation," the government yesterday said it was to limit the tax only to the interest accrued.
Jaitley said the objective behind the proposal was that no tax is levied on 40 per cent of the withdrawal which can be used for meeting retirement commitments.
The balance, he said, can be converted into annuity and the person would get a regular pension and he does not pay tax.
(REOPENS DEL 17)
Revenue Secretary Hasmukh Adhia said the government wants 60 per cent of the withdrawals from employee provident fund to be invested in annuity pension schemes rather than the 100 per cent of the money being taken home.
The government, he said, wants to encourage individuals to select any annuity product from anyone who gives the best.
"But still if you have compulsion that you don't want to buy annuity product, you really want to withdraw the money then it should be taxed," he said, adding that its a reform measure of the government.
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