Pension
fund regulator PFRDA has invited bids from financial institutions to
manage funds of Central Government Employees under the New Pension
Scheme (NPS) for the next three years beginning April 1, 2012.
The fund managers will be required to manage the pension assets of
Central government employees, according to Pension Fund Regulatory and
Development Authority (PFRDA).
The three pension fund managers will have to submit bids by March 15,
PFRDA said. At present, pension funds of government employees are
managed by three pension fund managers (PFMs) — LIC Pension Fund, SBI
Pension Fund, and UTI Retirement Solutions. The total corpus of the
government employees as on December 2011 was Rs 12,769 crore.
These three fund managers are also eligible for participating in the
bidding process, the regulator said. The total average monthly
subscriptions of government employees is around Rs 500 crore.
National Pension System (NPS) was introduced on January 1, 2004, and is
mandatory for central government employees (except armed forces
personnel) appointed on or after January 2004. The scheme was made
available to all citizens on a voluntary basis from May 1, 2009.
Even though NPS is an immensely beneficial financial product for
unorganised sector employees, especially those who do not manage a
steady source of income after retirement, it has received lukewarm
response till now.
To popularise the scheme, PFRDA, in September 2010, introduced the
Swavalamban scheme. Under this scheme, the government contributed Rs
1,000 per year to each NPS account opened in the year 2010-11 and for
the next three years, i.E., 2011-12, 2012-13 and 2013-14. To be
eligible, a person has to make a minimum contribution of Rs 1,000 and
maximum contribution of Rs 12,000 per annum.
Source: Times of India
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