Reference Text
Time Left10:00
What
has
attracted
the
ire
of
workers'
unions
now
is
the
February
notification
by
the
Centre
imposing
new
restrictions
on
premature
withdrawals
from
the
EPF,
by
workers
who
are
between
jobs.
Earlier
rules
allowed
employees
to
claim
their
entire
accumulated
balance
in
the
EPF
before
the
age
of
54
if
they
remained
unemployed
for
two
consecutive
months.
The
new
rules
state
that
they
can
cash
out
their
own
contributions,
but
the
employer's
contribution
and
the
interest
on
it
would
be
locked
in
until
the
age
of
57.
Nor
was
there
any
official
notification
on
whether
the
locked
in
sums
would
earn
any
interest.
The
labour
ministry
has
tried
to
rationalise
this
by
stating
that
the
rules
were
meant
to
ensure
that
every
worker
has
a
reasonable
retirement
corpus,
and
argued
that
the
bar
on
withdrawals
only
applied
to
3.67
per
cent
of
the
employer's
contribution
(the
other
8.33
per
cent
goes
into
a
pension
scheme).
But
this
ignores
the
very
real
hardships
faced
by
low
income
workers.
While
financial
theorists
ask
investors
to
neatly
set
aside
separate
portfolios
towards
emergencies,
health
and
retirement,
those
with
subsistence
level
earnings
can
hardly
afford
such
luxuries.
For
an
unemployed
worker,
clear
present
needs
outweigh
notional
future
security.
It
is
also
specious
to
argue
that
the
residual
3.67
per
cent
can
help
anyone
secure
their
retirement.
Indeed
it
is
ironic
that
while
the
EPF
is
trying
to
prevent
unemployed
workers
from
cashing
out,
workers
who
are
still
in
service
are
allowed
early
withdrawals
if
they
need
money
for
'approved'
purposes
such
as
marriage,
acquiring
a
home,
or
treating
illness.
Instead
of
taking
such
a
paternalistic
approach
to
employee
savings,
the
labour
ministry
should
rework
the
EPF
rules
to
make
the
fund
more
flexible
and
attractive
to
investors.
Allowing
employees
to
vary
their
annual
contributions
based
on
savings,
transparency
about
the
fund's
costs,
and
investment
strategy,
and
admitting
re
entry
into
the
scheme
after
premature
exit,
will
help
build
employee
confidence
in
the
vehicle.
As
to
preventing
hasty
exits,
counselling
sessions
that
explain
the
impact
of
frequent
withdrawals
on
one's
retirement
kitty
may
work
far
better
than
forcibly
closing
the
gate.
What
has
attracted
the
ire
of
workers'
unions
now
is
the
February
notification
by
the
Centre
imposing
new
restrictions
on
premature
withdrawals
from
the
EPF,
by
workers
who
are
between
jobs.
Earlier
rules
allowed
employees
to
claim
their
entire
accumulated
balance
in
the
EPF
before
the
age
of
54
if
they
remained
unemployed
for
two
consecutive
months.
The
new
rules
state
that
they
can
cash
out
their
own
contributions,
but
the
employer's
contribution
and
the
interest
on
it
would
be
locked
in
until
the
age
of
57.
Nor
was
there
any
official
notification
on