New
Delhi: The meeting of the Central Board of Trustees
(CBT) of the Employees'' Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO)
held here yesterday to finalise the rate of interest payable
on EPF deposits for the current financial year ended inconclusive
with a section of labour leaders refusing to accept a
reduction from last year''s 9.5 per cent.
It
has been decided that the CBT will meet again next Tuesday
to deliberate on the issue. Meanwhile, the trade union
leaders have sought an appointment with the Prime Minister
on this issue.
The
Left leaders urged the union labour minister, Sis Ram
Ola, who is the chairman of the CBT, to lead a labour
delegation to the prime minister on this issue.
In
a joint letter signed by the CITU, the AITUC, the HMS
and the UTUC-LS after the meeting was over, the trade
unions urged Ola to arrange to lead a delegation of the
CBT to meet the prime minister for resolving this issue
through his good offices.
In
yesterday''s meeting there were serious differences of
opinion among the trade unions. Sources said that while
the Congress-affiliated INTUC was agreeable to 8.25 per
cent and insisted for an announcement to the effect, the
Left trade unions rejected the idea.
According
to estimates made by the EPFO, if interest is paid at
eight per cent, then EPFO will have a surplus of Rs 156
crore. If it is pegged at 8.25 per cent, the shortfall
is Rs 26 crore. At 8.5 per cent interest, the EPFO''s shortfall
would stand at Rs 206.45 crore while for paying nine per
cent interest the deficit would climb to 566.80 crore.
If
the interest rate for 2004-05 is at 9.5 per cent, the
shortfall amounts to Rs 927.15 crore. If one considers
the Leftists trade unions initial demand of 12 per cent
interest, the EPFO''s shortage reaches Rs 2,728.87 crore.
A proposal on whether differential interest rates can
be introduced
on the basis of EPF Act''s gross income ceiling level of
Rs 6,500 had also come up for discussion but was ruled
out because of legal complications.
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