EPF scheme: SC asks Centre to consider revising wage ceiling

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PTI

New Delhi

The Supreme Court on Monday asked the Centre to consider taking a decision within four months on the revision of wage ceiling for the Employees Provident Fund Scheme (EPFO) which has not been revised in the last 11 years.

A bench of Justices JK Maheshwari and A S Chandurkar passed the order on a plea filed by activist Naveen Prakash Nautiyal claiming that the Employees Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO), which administers social security schemes for employees, currently excludes from coverage those whose wages exceed Rs 15,000 per month.

Advocates Pranav Sachdeva and Neha Rathi, appearing for the petitioner, said the wage revision has not taken place in over a decade despite the fact that the minimum wage notified by the central government and by various states is more than the EPFO wage ceiling of Rs 15,000 per month. Sachdeva said this has deprived the majority of workers of the benefits and protection of the EPFO scheme, which is essentially a social welfare scheme.

The petitioner has submitted that those employees who earn more than the wage ceiling are excluded from availing the EPFO scheme.

The bench disposed of the plea filed by Nautiyal and asked him to make a representation to the central government within two weeks along with a copy of the order which will be decided by the central government within four months.

 Nautiyal’s plea said it is seeking enforcement of fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 21 and for directions regarding the arbitrary and irregular revision of the wage ceiling under the Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme, 1952, framed under the Employees’ Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952.

It said the wage ceiling has historically been revised inconsistently, sometimes after 13-14 years, without any fixed periodicity or linkage to relevant economic indicators such as inflation, minimum wages, per capita income or consumer price index.

“This erratic approach has resulted in the exclusion of large sections of the workforce, contrary to the object of providing social security to employees in the organised sector. The Public Accounts Committee of the 16th Lok Sabha and the EPFO’s own Sub-Committee (2022) have both recommended periodic and rational revision of the ceiling, but despite approval by the Central Board (EPF) in July 2022, the Central Government has not acted upon these recommendations,” it said.

The plea said that the revision of the wage ceiling over the last 70 years has not been consistent with any of the metrics–minimum pay of the central government employees, income tax exemption limit, annual growth rate in per capita net national income, minimum wages and annual inflation rates.

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