The Government of India introduced the Unified Pension Scheme (UPS) as a middle path between the traditional Old Pension Scheme (OPS) and the National Pension System (NPS). While the promise of a guaranteed pension—equivalent to 50% of the last 12 months’ average basic pay—is central to UPS, the response so far has been lukewarm. As of mid-April, only about 1,500 central government employees, or a mere 0.05% of the 2.7 million staff enrolled in NPS since 2004, have opted for UPS.
Unveiled to address long-standing employee demands for pension certainty, UPS introduces defined benefit elements into what had become a defined contribution retirement ecosystem under NPS. Key features include:
Despite these seemingly attractive benefits, UPS has had a tepid reception. Just over 1,500 employees have switched from NPS in the first two weeks since the scheme became available on 1 April. However, the decision window remains open till 30 June, and the timeline could be extended if needed.
Under UPS:
In UPS, if an employee opts to withdraw up to 60% of the individual corpus after retirement, the guaranteed pension will be proportionally reduced. This contrasts with NPS, where the remaining 40% (after the allowed 60% lump sum withdrawal) could be larger, thanks to a higher total monthly contribution (24% under NPS vs 20% under UPS).
Employees appear to be in wait-and-watch mode, weighing:
The UPS may provide more certainty in retirement income, but it comes with trade-offs in flexibility, corpus size, and personalisation of annuity options. The scheme is still in its early days, and uptake may rise as employees conduct more detailed evaluations of the benefits. With the deadline of 30 June approaching, the coming weeks will be crucial in determining the broader acceptance of this hybrid pension model.
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Published on: Apr 16, 2025, 3:37 PM IST
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