Ahead
of launching the demonetisation drive, the Finance Ministry had sought Law
Ministry’s opinion whether Aadhaar submission could be made compulsory for small
savings scheme.
The
Law Ministry has turned down Finance Ministry’s proposal that a person investing
in small savings schemes — these attract gross deposits of over Rs 2 lakh crore
each year — be made to link the accounts to his or her Aadhaar number.
Ahead
of launching the demonetisation drive, the Finance Ministry had sought Law
Ministry’s opinion whether Aadhaar submission could be made compulsory for small
savings schemes like Kisan Vikas Patra, Public Provident Fund, National Savings
Certificate, Senior Citizen Saving Scheme and Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana.
The
rationale put forth by Finance Ministry’s Department of Economic Affairs (DEA)
was that individuals evade scrutiny by parking cash below Rs 50,000 into
multiple small savings accounts because such deposits (below Rs 50,000) do not
seek permanent account number (PAN) details.
The
Law Ministry turned down DEA’s proposal on October 4 saying such schemes cannot
be notified as “service within the meaning of Section 7 of the Aadhaar Act”
since small savings are serviced under the Public Account Fund of India and not
the Consolidated Fund to which the Aadhaar Act applies.
Section
7 of the Act states that the government can ask an individual to furnish his
Aadhaar number to establish his identity “as a condition for receipt of a
subsidy, benefit or service for which the expenditure is incurred from, or the
receipt therefrom forms part of, the Consolidated Fund of India”.
Not
satisfied with the legal opinion, the DEA once again approached Law Ministry to
reconsider the October 4 advice, saying that the fresh reasoning for bringing
small savings under the Aadhaar ambit was that the “expenditure incurred to
campaign for small savings scheme was derived from the Consolidated Fund”.
On
December 14, Law Ministry reiterated its earlier opinion and directed that all
transactions relating to these schemes should be accounted from the Public
Account Fund as per the National Small Savings Fund (Custody & Investment)
Rules.
Quoting
a 2001 order of a Constitution Bench of the Supreme Court, the Law Ministry said
“when a statute vests certain power in an authority to be exercised in a
particular manner, the said authority has to exercise it only in the manner
provided in the statute itself”.
In
fiscal 2014-15, deposits in small savings schemes were Rs 289,080 crore while
withdrawals were Rs 248,667 crore.
Source:
Indian express.
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