Henceforth, salaried people earning up to Rs. 15,000 a
month will have to compulsorily maintain an employee provident fund account,
with the Government notifying the new norm. Earlier the salary limit was Rs. 6,500 a
month.
The minimum pension has also been hiked to Rs. 1,000/month,
a longstanding demand of workers’ representatives in the Employees Provident
Fund Organisation (EPFO). All the revised schemes will
be implemented from
September 1.
The decisions had been taken by the EPFO trustees towards the
end of the UPA’s tenure, but had not been notified. After taking over in June,
the Narendra Modi Government had assured trade unions that it would notify them
within two weeks.
The Gazette notification, dated August 22, also raised the
maximum assured sum under the Employees’ Deposit Linked Insurance Scheme to Rs. 3 lakh.
Accordingly, in a circular issued on August 28, the EPFO has
requested all regional PF commissioners to implement the schemes in “letter and
spirit”.
In his maiden Budget speech in July, Finance Minister Arun
Jaitley had said that it was mandatory for salaried persons earning up to Rs. 15,000 a
month to maintain PF accounts.
More subscribers
The move to hike the wage ceiling, as per EPFO estimates, will
draw in about five million new PF subscribers. The hike in pension is expected
to benefit 2.8 million pensioners, including 500,000 widows, some of whom have
been getting a measly amount of Rs. 150-200 a month.
Orphaned children of the deceased subscriber will now get a
maximum assured sum of Rs. 750 a month for 2014-15.
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