Retirement fund body, EPFO has
decided to put on hold the decision to make it mandatory for new members joining EPF scheme to provide Aadhaar number as credential for enrolment from
March 1, 2013.
"In view of discussion
with UIDAI official and the time required in the process of obtaining Aadhaar
numbers, it may not be possible to obtain Aadhaar number by EPF members by
March 1, 2013. Therefore it has been decided to not to make Aadhar number
mandatory for EPFO members March 1, 2013", an EPFO order to the field
staff said.
Late last month, Employees'
Provident Fund Organisation's (EPFO) decision drew flak from trade unions,
following which the body has now decided to put it on hold.
However, the field staff has
been asked to make efforts to obtain the available Aadhaar number of EPF
members.
The staff has also been asked
to collect core banking account numbers of all contributing members. The EPFO order has observed
that getting the Aadhaar is a time consuming process and the scheme covers 18
states only. The remaining states are
covered by the Register General of India under the National Population Register
which would be digital database of country's residents.
EPFO had envisaged replacing
members' account numbers with their Aadhaar numbers to avoid inconvenience to
people as they had to apply for transfer of PF money to new accounts while
changing jobs.
Now, EPFO is working on
creating a central data base where all members would have a permanent account
number and would not require to transfer PF accounts on changing job.
Besides, this will help EPFO
members, particularly construction workers, who often change their jobs or
contractors.
The next news that buzzed from
EPFO premises this week was that it may get 8.5 per cent return on their
investment during 2012-13, higher than 8.25 per cent provided in the last
fiscal.
The body's proposal is likely
to come up for discussion during its apex decision making body Central Board of
Trustees (CBT) scheduled on February 15, a source said.
"The EPFO has worked out
8.5 per cent rate of return for the current fiscal. It will not leave any
deficit. However, the proposal has not been finalised as yet," the source
added.
The Employees Provident Fund
Organisation (EPFO) had paid 9.5 per cent interest in 2010-11, before scaling
it down to 8.25 per cent in 2011-12 fiscal.
EPFO will place the proposal
regarding the interest rate before its advisory body Finance and Investment
Committee (FIC) at its meeting on February 14. Once approved by the FIC, it
will go to Labour Minister-headed CBT for final approval.
The notification on interest
rate is issued by the government after concurrence by the Finance Ministry.
Although EPFO announces
interest rate at the beginning of the year, there has been a delay this time.
Trade unions have been pressing for an early meeting of the CBT to decide on
the interest rate for the current fiscal.
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