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India’s provident fund payout: A rate that doesn't bend
Mint Kolkata
|March 10, 2026
The EPFO’s rate of interest must track market dynamics for it not to weaken monetary policy transmission
Last week, the Central Board of Trustees (CBT) of India’s Employees’ Provident Fund Organisation (EPFO) fixed the fund’s interest-rate payout at 8.25% for 2025-26, the third year in a row at that rate. The decision covers the retirement savings of 73.7 million formal-sector workers. It was received, as usual, with union relief. But can India’s monetary policy work when so large a part of its savings system is immune to it?
In 2025, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) cut its benchmark repo rate four times by a cumulative 125 basis points from 6.5% to 5.25%, the most aggressive easing cycle since 2019. Consumer price inflation fell to 1.33% in December. The logic of lower rates was clear: reduce the cost of capital and let monetary easing reach businesses, borrowers and consumers. Monetary transmission, however, requires the entire interest rate architecture to move together; it isn’t.
The EPF rate at 8.25% is 300 basis points above the repo rate. Even the 10-year government bond, which carries duration risk that an EPF depositor does not, yields about 6.7%. The EPF rate exceeds it by 155 basis points. This gap between the market benchmark for long-term sovereign borrowing and a guaranteed administered return on workers’ retirement savings is not a marginal inefficiency but a structural anomaly.
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