New Delhi, September 11:
Pension regulator PFRDA is hopeful of a final
government decision within a month over allowing the nearly three
million Central government employees choose their own fund manager as
well as investment allocation for their National Pension System (NPS)
contributions.
Currently, Central government
employees have no say on the matter of choice of fund manager or
investment allocation, as both are decided by the government.
The
equity allocation is currently capped at 15 per cent for government
employees. All NPS contributions of Central government employees are
being distributed evenly across three public sector fund managers — LIC
Pension Fund, SBI Pension Fund and UTI.
For non-government employees, the equity allocation can be as high as 50 per cent.
“Our
surmise is that within a month or so, the government will take the
final call. We have been pushing for it for one year now. The committee
set up under the aegis of Personnel Ministry with representation from
Department of Financial Services has finalised its report,” Hemant
Contractor, Chairman, PFRDA, told BusinessLine here on Monday.
Allow ‘same choices’
He
said PFRDA had no information on the content of the report or whether
the committee had recommended flexibility to government employees. The
pension regulator had urged the Centre to allow Central government
employees to have the “same choices” as available to non-government
employees. This would mean government employees getting an option to
take their equity allocation up to 50 per cent.
It
may be recalled that the Seventh Pay Commission, too, had made a case
for widening the choice for Central government employees. Chief Economic
Advisor Arvind Subramanian has also supported such an initiative,
stating that allowing a choice on selection of fund manager and
investment allocation was “long overdue”.
Meanwhile,
Contractor said the total corpus under NPS had crossed ₹2 lakh crore.
About 85 per cent in value terms is accounted for by the government
sector. The non-government sector’s AUM stood at about ₹30,000 crore.
Contractor
said the issue of awarding licences to new pension fund managers
(PFMs), who will for the first time operate under a “differential
pricing” model for the private sector schemes of NPS, has been stuck on
the issue of FDI in pension sector. “There had been a change in the FEMA
guidelines, as a result of which the interpretation of foreign
investment has undergone a change. We have held several rounds of
discussions with the DFS,” he said.
Licences likely by year-end
Contractor said PFRDA was quite hopeful that licences would be awarded by the end of this calendar year.
Indications
are that PFRDA will award licences to all the nine entities that had
responded to its request for proposals (RFP) issued in September last
year.
The nine bidders (three public sector and six
from private sector) had bid for a management fee that ranged from 0.07
per cent to 0.1 per cent, industry sources said. In the RFP, the pension
regulator had capped the investment management fee at 0.1 per cent a
year.
This was the first time PFRDA had invited bids
for appointment of PFMs, after its statutory recognition (PFRDA Act,
2013) and the framing of Pension Fund Regulations in 2015.
Ushering
in “differential pricing” is expected to make the pension sector more
“market-driven” and ensure that NPS subscribers can make an informed
choice.
Source : http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/
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