A day after the 2016-17 Budget proposed taxing 60 per cent of the withdrawal from Employee Provident Fund (EPF) on contributions to be made after April 1, the government was hard pressed to explain that the move was aimed at high-salaried class and not the overwhelming section of 3.7 crore EPF members.
After a couple of clarifications including one that said the government would only tax the interest and not the principal withdrawn, the government came out with a press note that it was considering demands to limit the tax only to interest accrued.
He said those below Rs 15,000 a month of statutory wage limit "will not be affected".
"Since many people have registered protest, we are looking into it. Let's wait for a decision," he said.
Revenue Secretary Hashmukh Adhia also said the demand for tax on the interest component only would be taken into considering while taking a final view on the issue.
Earlier in the day, Adhia had said only interest on 60 per cent of contributions made after April 1, 2016 will be taxed and that the principal amount of contribution will remain untouched at the time of withdrawal.
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley in his Budget for 2016-17 also proposed a monetary limit for contribution of employer in recognised PF and superannuation fund at Rs 1.5 lakh per annum for taking tax benefit.
The proposals came under immediate attack from various employees unions including RSS-backed BMS and also the political parties who termed it as "an attack on the working class and a clear case of double taxation."
"We have also received representations asking for not having any monetary limit on the employer contribution under EPF, because such a limit is not there in NPS. The Finance Minister would be considering all these suggestions and taking a view on it in due course.
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