The number of new monthly subscribers under the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) declined by 0.8 per cent to 757,792 in March from 764,106 in February.
Earlier between April and September in FY23, the social security organisation has seen more than one million monthly new subscribers, touching a high of 1,159,350 in July. However, in the second half of the financial year, new monthly subscribers struggled to breach the million mark even once.
However, the net monthly payroll numbers are provisional in nature and often revised sharply the following month. That is why the new EPF subscriber figure has greater certitude than net additions.
Of new young subscribers, the share of women, however, fell by 2.7 per cent to 119,033 in March from 122,395 in February.
The CMIE survey also showed that the effect of an increased unemployment rate got compounded by the simultaneous fall in the labour force participation rate, which fell from 39.9 per cent to 39.8 per cent in March, showing distress in job markets.
The monthly data released by EPFO is part of the government’s effort to track formal-sector employment by using payrolls as an instrument. Since April 2018, the National Statistical Office has been bringing out employment-related statistics in the formal sector, covering the period from September 2017 onwards, using information on the number of subscribers under three major schemes, namely the Employees’ Provident Fund Scheme, Employees’ State Insurance Scheme (ESIC), and the National Pension System.
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