The Budget has proposed that 60% of accumulated PF
should be taxed at time of withdrawal, with the clock starting from
April 1 this year (corpus accumulated before that won't be taxed), and
that employers' contribution above Rs 1.5 lakh a year should not be
tax-free.
These officials, who did not want to be
identified, said there has been brainstorming sessions inside the
government between various departments and employees' grievances about
their savings being taxed is now "firmly on the official agenda as a matter that needs looking into".
"The issue is under active consideration," a labour ministry official said.
The
official added that a "host of suggestions are likely to be formally
placed soon". "The discussions have been verbal so far. But there have
been several meetings with top officials to convey the feedback we have," this official said.
Officials
said the labour ministry hosted a long meeting on Thursday on the PF
issue. They said arguments were marshalled against the proposal,
including pointing out how PF was a source of cheap funds for the
government. All central trade unions plan to go on a nationwide general
strike on March 10. Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh,
a labour organisation affiliated to the RSS, has described the PF tax
proposal "disgusting" and "a gross injustice to workers".
"The Budget is overall nice but one thing has spoiled it. Workers are the only honest tax payers. Why should the government tax
them twice, and let corporates reap the benefits. We feel this is
because those at the Centre have been misled by bureaucrats. The PM
would have never wanted this," said Lakshma Reddy, vice-president, BMS.