Prabhakar Sinha
In his 37-year career Praveen Kohli hadn't got the kind of hike that he received four years after he retired as a general manager with Haryana Tourism Corporation. On November 1 this year, Kohli's pension rose by nearly 1200%-from Rs 2,372 to Rs 30,592 per month.
The windfall was courtesy a Supreme Court
order of October 2016 that directed the Employees' Provident Fund
Organisation (EPFO) to revise the pension of 12 petitioners under the
employee pension scheme (EPS).
The pension scheme, which is part of EPF, has
over 5 crore members. Every employee in the organised sector contributes
12% of basic salary and dearness allowance to EPF. The employer makes a
matching contribution. Of the employer's contribution, 8.33% goes to
the EPS. When people withdraw their EPF after a job switch or during
unemployment, the EPS is not given out. It's payable only after
superannuation.
There is also a ceiling on EPS contributions.
The current cap on salary (basic + DA) is Rs 15,000 per month so, the
maximum one can contribute to the EPS is 8.33% of Rs 15,000, which is Rs
1,250 a month.
Between July 2001 and September 2014, the EPS
salary cap was Rs 6,500 a month, which translated to a maximum
contribution of Rs 541.4 a month. Prior to 2001, the ceiling was Rs
5,000, which yielded a maximum contribution of Rs 416.5.
So how did 62-year-old Kohli get a pension of over Rs 30,000 a month with such a meagre contribution to the pension fund?
It took a long struggle in which he cited an
important amendment to EPS. In March 1996, the EPS Act was amended to
allow members to raise pension contribution to 8.33% of full salary
(basic + DA) irrespective of what the salary is. This raised the
pension, multiple times. However, for a decade hardly anybody opted for
higher contribution. In 2005, following media reports, including TOI,
several private EPF fund trustees and employees approached EPFO with the
demand to remove ceiling on their EPS contribution and raise it to
their total salary. EPFO rejected the demand claiming that response
should have come within six months of the 1996 amendment.
Cases were filed against EPFO in various high
courts. By 2016 all except one high court ruled against EPFO stating
that the six-month deadline was arbitrary and the employees must be
allowed to raise their pension contribution whenever they wish to. The
case went to Supreme Court which, in two separate rulings in 2016, ruled
in favour of employees' right to raise their contributions to pension
fund without imposing any cut-off date for eligibility.
It took another year for the EPFO to implement
the court order following a strong fight put up by petitioners like
Kohli. Finally, from November 2017, Kohli started getting a higher
pension.
To raise his monthly pension from Rs 2,372 to
Rs 30,592 Kohli had to pay Rs 15.37 lakh as the difference between EPS
contribution he had made while in service and the contribution he would
have made if he was allowed to raise it to his full salary. But he also
got Rs 13.23 lakh as arrears for the higher pension that he was entitled
to for four years spent in retirement before November 2017. So, by
paying Rs 2.14 lakh extra, Kohli was able to raise his lifelong pension
by nearly 13 times. In case he passes away before his wife, she will get
50% of Kohli's last drawn pension till she is alive.
Are all 5 crore members of EPFO now eligible
for higher pension if they opt to raise their EPS contribution? Yes, all
those who joined EPFO before September 1, 2014 - the date on which the
EPS imposed the Rs 15,000 salary cap - can contribute on their full
salary to EPS. They can submit applications to their company and the
EPFO and get up to half of their last average monthly salary as pension.
Those who have joined EPFO after September 1, 2014 and have a salary
above Rs 15,000 are not eligible for pension while those starting with
salaries lower than 15,000 can contribute to EPS but the cap of Rs
15,000 will kick in when their salary rises.
EPFO is also discriminating against employees
who are members of privately managed EPF trusts (nearly 80 lakh)
officially called Exempt Establishments and those who directly
contribute to the government-run trust (4.25 crore) called Un-exempt
Trusts.
Says VP Joy, central provident fund
commissioner: "EPS will not be able to give pension to those members
whose contributions on higher salary have not been received by EPFO."
The EPFO is denying employees of exempt companies higher pension on the
grounds that only 8.33% of up to Rs 15,000 and not their entire PF
contribution goes to EPS.
However, two of the 12 petitioners who went to
court were from the exempt category so a precedent has been set. It's
likely that members of private trusts or the trusts themselves will go
to the court to settle the issue. The EPFO's board of trustees is also
likely to discuss the move to bar exempt EPF trusts.
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