National Pension System and
Provident Fund should get
Same Income Tax Benefits
by Mr. Harsh Roongta, Registered Investment Advisor
Much has
already been written about the proposal to tax 60 per cent of the Employees'
Provident Fund (EPF) corpus on retirement and the subsequent rollback of this
provision.
As before, the entire corpus received back from
EPF will continue to be completely exempt from tax.
Thankfully, the proposal to exempt 40% of the
National Pension System (NPS) corpus is proposed to be continued.
While this exemption is better than there being
none at all, NPS will still remain a poor cousin compared to EPF.
The government has justified the proposal to tax
the withdrawal of corpus from both NPS and EPF by citing international
precedents. There is some logic in this argument.
The government, actually, contributes to building
your retirement corpus by way of tax foregone on the amounts contributed and on
the income generated on the corpus during the accumulation phase.
It does so because this enables you to build a
corpus that you can use to buy a monthly pension or, in other words, an assured
monthly salary after you retire.
Tax foregone is an incentive so that after
retirement, you do not become a burden on the government budget for social
schemes for poor people.
In most cases, the monthly pension that can be
generated will be much lower than what you earned when you were active and,
hence, will be lower than the amount that is chargeable to tax.
However, if the amount of pension generated in
any year is high enough for it to be in the taxable bracket, then the
government has every right to get back, at least, a small part of the tax that
it had foregone earlier.
This tax extracted from the relatively richer
retirees can, then, be used to fund the social schemes to provide at least
minimum sustenance to those people who have not been able to generate any such
corpus or insufficient corpus.
So, in theory, this tax sounds justified. In the
Indian context, however, there are no social schemes worth the name for the
poorer retirees. So, this tax just ends up as a small morsel for the
revenue-hungry government but takes a big bite out of the retiree's corpus.
There is another reason why this retirement tax
is inequitable in the Indian context. The same principle of taxing at
withdrawal what is foregone at the time of investment is not followed for many
other investments.
The biggest among these is the exemption of
capital gains on sale of a residential house if invested in another residential
house. This exemption is without any maximum limit at all (and can run into
multiple crores per taxpayer) and if the taxpayer invests the capital gains in another
residential house for only three years and sells that new residential house
after three years, the entire capital gains remains tax exempt forever. It is
also available to any number of residential properties owned by the taxpayer.
Even the poorest house owner who sells a house
property to buy another is among the relatively well-off Indians and the
majority of people who sell one house to buy another are among the top income
quartile of all Indians.
The amount of revenue foregone on this account
alone is much larger than what the retirees can withdraw (and this includes the
richest retirees as well) withdraw in any year.
It is inequitable for the government to forego
large sums of tax from the rich Indians, but levy a retirement tax on the
middle-class Indian.
Since the government is continuing to give EPF
the tax benefit, it is imperative that the entire NPS corpus must be
tax-exempt. If need be, it can be done by exempting from tax the pension
received through the NPS corpus.
The revenue loss is, in any case, spread over a
number of years and will be made up by the boost to financial savings in the
system.
Incidentally, even the 40% exemption benefit is
applicable only for employees and not for self-employed taxpayers.
There is no earthly reason for this exemption to
be denied to self-employed taxpayers and the government should correct this
anomaly at the earliest.
The writer is a Securities and Exchange Board of
India-registered investment advisor
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