Around 64 million members of the Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation may be affected as the EPF interest rate gets cut to 8.1 per cent, from 8.5 per cent for 2021-22 (FY 22). Reason cited for the cut: market pressures.
Many observers aren’t surprised by the rate cut as the current EPF interest rates were unsustainable. It marks the lowest rate of interest since 1977-78 when it was 8 per cent.
A while back, the government announced that interest on contributions of more than Rs 2.5 lakh a year would be taxed. Given the double whammy, many experts suggest that salaried individuals should start planning their retirement fund earlier in their career and build a diversified portfolio for it.
The National Pension System (NPS) is being seen as one of the alternatives to create a retirement corpus. And it has been gaining popularity in recent times. The number of subscribers under various NPS schemes shot up by 22.31% in a single year to exceed 50.72 million by February 2022, according to the Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA). This has been a clear sign that people are looking at various resources to plan their retirement.
Despite the interest rate cut, EPF will continue to hold appeal. The tax-efficiency at the contribution, investment/accumulation and maturity stages continue to hold value for those investing in it.
Also, alternatives such as the NPS were market-linked (even though the compound annual growth rate for the last five years on Scheme E tier 1 has been around 14%). Hence, many, especially those with a lower risk appetite, would continue to stay with EPF rather than opt for a market-linked pension scheme.