People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 49 December 04, 2005 |
As
you are very well aware, the question of interest rate on the deposits of the
Employees’ Provident Fund subscribers had been lingering as a contentious
issue, ever since the government of India decided to reduce the administered
rate of interest during successive years from 2000-01. Arising from this, the
declaration of rate of interest for the years 2002-03, 2003-04 and 2004-05 had
been a matter of uncertainty for unduly long periods.
As
recommended by the 168th meeting of the CBT, the matter has been taken up with
the government of India for continuing the Special Deposit Scheme and enhancing
the rate of interest on it, since August 2004. Unfortunately, the government of
India has so far not favourably responded to this.
In
your address to the special meeting of the CBT held on May 28, 2005, you
referred to the ‘various trade union leaders’ having ‘met the prime
minister’ and ‘made representations continuously for declaring the rate of
interest @ 9.5 per cent’. However, the said meeting took the
unprecedented decision, by majority, of bridging the deficit of Rs 716.07 crore
from the Special Reserve Fund to meet the interest for the year 2004-05 at 9.5
per cent. The meeting also noted that for declaring a rate of interest higher
than the income of the fund, the government should bridge the gap of income
deficit.
As
the government persists with the administered rate of interest at 8 per cent and
has resorted to issue government bonds (in which a minimum of 40 per cent of EPF
funds are required to be invested as per the guidelines on investment) at
interest rates further below that rate, the yield on the investments of the EPF
is dropping to further lows.
In
view of this, we request you to kindly take up the issue of enhancing the rate
of interest on the Special Deposit Scheme, as well as on the government bonds,
with the prime minister with the view to ensure that the rate of interest is, in
the least, not reduced further for the present fiscal year of 2005-06.
The
deposits in the EPF constitute the mandatory savings from out of the earnings of
the workers, of which a very substantial portion remains invested with the
government for almost the entire career life of the workers. You will appreciate
that any reduction of the rate of interest on these deposits will hit the
workers very hard and therefore the same should accorded a differential
treatment as against the other market related interest rates.
We
trust you will kindly accede to this request of ours and refrain from repeating
the unhealthy precedent of breaching the time-honoured tradition of the CBT, EPF
to arrive at decisions only by consensus and not by majority.