Bill to give pension sector regulator statutory powers gets House okay |
New Delhi, 4 September The Lok Sabha on Wednesday passed the Pension Fund Regulatory & Development Authority ( PFRDA) Bill, which seeks to give statutory powers to the interim regulator constituted by an executive order in 2003. The pension reforms Bill has fixed the ceiling on foreign direct investment ( FDI) in the sector at 26 per cent — to move in sync with that for the insurance sector. The Bill passed by the lower house on Wednesday carried some amendments to the one tabled in 2011. The earlier version had kept the option of FDI cap outside the purview of the legislation, as it was believed the FDI cap could be raised through an executive order. However, the revised Bill included it as part of the legislation, following objection from Parliament's standing committee on finance. Other amendments include providing subscribers the option of investing in the schemes that provide minimum assured returns. On this, during the debate in the Lok Sabha, Bhratruhari Mahtab of the Biju Janata Dal sought amendments to provide that the government give minimum assured returns equivalent to at least the interest rate offered by the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation ( EPFO). Finance Minister P Chidambaram said it was not possible to give an undertaking that assured returns would be higher (or lower) than the EPFO rates but added the money could be invested in government securities. The proposed pension fund in some cases. These cases and the number of withdrawals will be decided by PFRDA. The proposed law will give statutory powers to PFRDA, which has been regulating the New Pension Scheme ( NPS) since January 1, 2004, and had 5.28 million subscribers and a corpus of ₹ 34,965 crore as on August 14, 2013. NPS is different from the earlier pension system in that it has defined contributions, while the earlier one had defined benefits. All central government employees, except armed forces, who joined the services since January 1, 2004, are part of NPS. Turn to Page 22 > "The New Pension System (regulated by PFRDA) is the only genuine plan. Pension products of insurance companies are already there. Going forward, NPS will be the only pure pension programme" YOGESH AGARWAL Chairman, PFRDA >The FDI cap for the pension sector, which has been fixed at 26%, will move in sync with that for the insurance sector >The insurance Bill, which seeks to raise FDI cap from 26% to 49%, will be taken up in Parliament's winter session, says FM >Pension fund subscribers will get the option to invest their money in schemes with minimum assured returns >At least one of the managers for the proposed pension fund will have to mandatorily be from the public sector >At least 40 per cent of subscribers' money under the proposed pension fund will have to be mandatorily annuitised SPECIAL Coverage ECONOMY P4 > >10 things you wanted to know >What the passage of the Bill means >Enactment brings optimism |
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