Public
Provident Fund Act, 1968 stands repealed: Will it impact PPF investors?
The
government has recently brought about a significant change in the management of
post office small savings schemes.
The Government Savings Certificates Act,
1959 and the Public Provident Fund Act, 1968 have been merged with the
Government Savings Banks Act, 1873, and all of them will now come under the
Government Savings Promotion Act.
This means, your investments in PPF will not
be as per the PPF Act anymore. The Government Savings Certificates Act, 1959
and the Public Provident Fund Act, 1968 stand repealed.
Back
in February 2018, the government had proposed about this and stated that
relevant provisions of the Government Savings Banks Act, 1873, Government
Savings Certificates (NSC) Act, 1959 and the Public Provident Fund Act, 1968
would stand subsumed in the new amended Act without compromising on any of the
functional provisions of the existing Act.
A
big change will be that instead of PPF Act, it will now be Public Provident
Fund Scheme, 2019 that will determine the rules determining the operation of
the PPF scheme. The PPF rules are kept the same and there is no major change in
any of the features of the PPF scheme. All deposits made in the accounts or
certificate shall be deemed to be made under the relevant provisions of the
Government Savings Promotion Act, 1873.
There have been a few cosmetic changes,
however, that does not mean anything functionally will change for PPF
depositors. The government has retained all existing protections while
consolidating PPF Act under the Government Savings Banks Act, 1873.
As
per the government of India notification dated December 12, 2019, it is also
made clear that
"Amount standing to the credit of any account holder shall
not be liable to attachment under any order or decree of any court in respect
of any debt or liability incurred by the account holder." Therefore, in
PPF, the Protection of credit balance from attachment will continue to be
there.
Some
of the cosmetic changes in the PPF scheme includes
the minimum initial deposit
of Rs 500 instead of Rs 100 earlier,
making any number of monthly deposits as
against 12 in one year earlier.
Further, the nomenclature of relevant Forms
have been changed. For opening PPF account instead of Form A, it will now be
Form 1.
In
addition to Public Provident Fund Scheme, 2019, the government has notified the
following schemes:
Sukanya
Samriddhi Account Scheme, 2019
Senior
Citizens’ Savings Scheme (SCSS), 2019
National
Savings (Monthly Income Account) Scheme, 2019
National
Savings Recurring Deposit Scheme, 2019
National
Savings Certificates (VIII Issue) Scheme, 2019
Kisan
Vikas Patra Scheme, 2019
National
Savings Time Deposit Scheme, 2019
Importantly,
PPF will continue to enjoy the exempt-exempt-exempt (E-E-E) tax benefit status
as earlier.
PPF subscribers or depositors of MIS, Time Deposits, SCSS, Sukanya
Samriddhi Account Scheme or holders of NSC, KVP certificates need not be
concerned about their money. The investments continue to be governed by the
government and carry a sovereign guarantee.
Happy Investing
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