People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXV
No.
33 August 14, 2011 |
Govt must Enhance Its Contribution to EPF Corpus
ON August 2, CPI(M)
MP and CITU general secretary Tapan Sen wrote a letter to Mallikarjun
Kharge,
the union minister of labour & employment, regarding the employees
pension
scheme 1995. It is to be noted that Kharge is also chairman of the CBT
(EPFO) (Central
Board of Trustees, Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation).
Sen’s letter drew
the minister’s attention to the following recommendation of the
Standing
Committee and the government’s reply which was interim in nature:
The committee note that EPS 1995 is a contributory
scheme wherein the employers’ contribution towards the pension of the
employee
is diverted @ 8.33% from the total contribution of 12% made towards
social
security obligations. Under the EPS, no contribution is taken from the
member,
i.e., the employee for the pension scheme. The government contributes @
1.16%
to the pension fund. Admittedly, neither of the above rates of
contributions
has been revised for the last 14 years. On being asked about the
reasons for
non-revision of contribution by the government, it has been stated that
generally the government contribution is increasing. It has further
been staged
that presently there is no proposal to enhance the contribution of the
government.
The non-revision in the rates of contributions even after one and a
half
decade, speaks volumes about the callous attitude of the government
towards the
workforce. More so, when this segment of the workforce has contributed
enormously in the economy of the country leading to increase in leaps
and
bounds in the revenue collection of the government. The committee,
therefore,
strongly recommend that the formula regarding rate of contribution
should be revised
at periodic intervals wherein the rate of contribution from the
government
should at least be fixed at half of the rate of contribution which is
being
made by the employer or the employee towards the pension scheme.”
The government’s
reply to the above recommendation said the following:
“At present, an Expert Committee under the chairmanship
of Special Secretary (Labour and Employment) consisting of actuaries,
expert of
finance and representatives of all stakeholders is reviewing the
Employees’
Pension Scheme 1995 as a whole and any decision / action regarding
enhancement
of government’s contribution will be considered after the receipt of
the
recommendations of this Expert Committee.”
This, according to
Sen, means the Expert Committee which was constituted on June 12, 2009,
did not
take into cognisance the recommendation of the parliamentary committee
at all
in its report. But the Expert Committee report, now under the
consideration of
CBT, cannot in any way overrule the recommendation of a parliamentary
committee.
It is only for the government to accept or reject the standing
committee’s
recommendation on enhancement of government’s contribution. Se said
that as a
veteran parliamentarian, the labour minister would agree that
recommendation of
a parliamentary committee cannot be ignored in what appears to be a
very
cavalier manner.
Sen therefore urged
Kharage that both as the labour minister and as the chairman of the
CBT, he
must accept the recommendation of the standing committee and take up
the case forcefully
with the government. He also expressed the sincere hope that the
unanimous
recommendations of the parliamentary standing committee, backed up by
all the central
trade union organisations, the CBT (EPF)) and the labour ministry,
would have a
formidable influence upon the government agreeing to an enhancement of
its
contribution in the interest of the working class of the country.