Savings are meaningless if you can't access the funds. When Dhairya Tanna, 33, tried to withdraw ₹3 lakh from his EPF account, the Employees' Provident Fund Organisation rejected his application. The chartered accountant wanted to withdraw some money to purchase his first house. Despite submitting all the relevant documents, he says his claim was rejected on the grounds of improper cheque image.
Last year, the EPFO rejected 24% of partial-withdrawal claims—Tanna's being one among 8.7 million rejected applications. EPFO rejected one in every three final settlements in 2023, according to the EPFO annual report. It was the highest in five years.
Tanna approached his company's human resources department to cut his EPF contribution, but his request was declined, as the company had a policy to deduct 12% of basic pay, plus dearness allowance for all staff. "I did not want to put money in EPF," said Tanna, who works in internal audit. "I want to invest in MFs as EPF rules are complex and withdrawal is an issue."
Compulsory contributions
By law, companies with more than 19 employees are required to register with the EPFO. The government uses a huge chunk of the money it gets through EPFO inflows to buy government of India securities, which in turn helps finance budget deficits.
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