Pensions and retirement: India

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The Indian retirement system was ranked last worldwide, while Denmark topped the list of countries in the Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index 2015. The MMGPI's seventh edition measured 25 retirement income systems against more than 40 indicators, under the sub-indices of adequacy, sustainability and integrity. In the process, it covered nearly 60% of the global population
 
The Indian retirement system was ranked last worldwide, while Denmark topped the list of countries in the Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index 2015. The MMGPI's seventh edition measured 25 retirement income systems against more than 40 indicators, under the sub-indices of adequacy, sustainability and integrity. In the process, it covered nearly 60% of the global population
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=Pension gap: 2015-2050 (expected)=
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[[File: Pension gap, India and the world.jpg|Pension gap, India and the world; [http://epaperbeta.timesofindia.com/Gallery.aspx?id=04_06_2017_023_053_002&type=P&artUrl=INCREDIBLE-FACT-04062017023053&eid=31808 The Times of India], June 4, 2017|frame|500px]]

Revision as of 11:42, 31 July 2017

In 2015, the Indian retirement income system was the worst among the 25measured; Graphic courtesy: The Times of India, December 13, 2015

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

National Pension System (NPS)

Transfer from provident, superannuation funds

`Fund transferred from PF to NPS not taxable', March 8, 2017: The Times of India

PFRDA Now Unveils Rules On Transfers

The pension regulator unveiled rules for transfer from recognised provident and superannuation funds to the National Pension System (NPS).

In the 2016-17 budget, the government had announced that subscribers from provident and superannuation funds would be able to transfer their corpus from these funds to NPS without any tax complications.

The Pension Fund and Regulatory Development Authority said any subscriber interested in such a transfer should have an active NPS Tier I account which can be opened either through the employer (where NPS is implemented) or through the points-of-presence (POPs) or online through eNPS on the NPS Trust website.

The regulator also made it clear that as per the provisions of the Income Tax Act, 1961, the amount transferred from recognised provident or superannuation fund to NPS was not treated as income for the current year and hence not taxable.

“Further, the transferred recognised provident fund superannuation fund will not be treated as contribution of the current year by employeeemployer and accordingly the subscriber would not make income tax claim of contribution for this transferred amount,“ the regulator said in a statement.

The subscriber presently under government, private sector employment should approach the recognised provident or superannuation fund trust through the current employer requesting transfer to the NPS account.

“The recognised provident fundsuperannuation fund trust may initiate transfer of the fund as per the provisions of the trust deed read with the provisions of the Income Tax Act,“ the pension regulator said.

In case of a government or private sector employee, the employee should request the recognised provident or superannuation fund to issue a letter to his present employer mentioning that the amount was being transferred from the recognised fund to the NPS Tier I account of the employee. This should be recorded by the present employer or POP as the case may be, while uploading the amount.

The return on NPS for central government employees for one year works out to 15.9% while for five years it stands at 11%.

Global Pension Index 2015

The Times of India, Dec 13 2015 

No country to retire


The Indian retirement system was ranked last worldwide, while Denmark topped the list of countries in the Melbourne Mercer Global Pension Index 2015. The MMGPI's seventh edition measured 25 retirement income systems against more than 40 indicators, under the sub-indices of adequacy, sustainability and integrity. In the process, it covered nearly 60% of the global population

Pension gap: 2015-2050 (expected)

Pension gap, India and the world; The Times of India, June 4, 2017
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