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NPS funds outperform EPF and PPF returns

NPS is in the spotlight after Budget 2021 decided to tax on interest on EPF contributions over Rs 2.5 lakh

February 10, 2021 / 09:14 IST
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Image: Reuters
Image: Reuters

Union Budget 2021 is all set to hit the retirement corpuses of individuals who rely almost entirely on Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) for their retirement needs.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman has proposed to tax interest income on EPF contribution exceeding Rs 2.5 lakh a year from April 1. It’s not only affluent individuals with basic salaries of around Rs 21 lakh or more per annum who will be affected, but also employees who invest more than 12 percent of their basic voluntarily in the scheme (VPF).

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Such employees can choose between two options. They can continue with EPF whose post-tax returns work out to 5.8 percent annually assuming highest tax bracket and 2019-20’s rate of 8.5 percent. It is still higher than what 5-10-year fixed deposits offer currently. Alternatively, they can look at moving the ‘excess’ contribution to other instruments such as Public Provident Fund (PPF), equity mutual funds and National Pension System (NPS).