Non-government NPS subscribers can now withdraw up to 80% of their retirement corpus as a lump sum upon exit, and in some ...
New National Pension System rules permit non-government subscribers to withdraw up to 80% of their corpus as a lump sum upon ...
A quarter of a million more pensioners in poverty after state pension age rises – will it go higher?
When the state pension age rose to 66, the percentage of 65-year-olds in income poverty more than doubled, new research ...
PFRDA allows non-govt NPS subscribers to withdraw 80% of corpus. Exit age raised to 85. New rules offer greater flexibility.
PFRDA has eased NPS exit rules for private subscribers, removing the 5-year lock-in and allowing higher lump-sum withdrawals.
The new amendment has extended 100% withdrawal limit from Rs 5 lakh to Rs 8 lakh for the government subscribers of NPS upon ...
The National Pension System (NPS) has now brought some flexibility for subscribers after the PFRDA, or Pension Fund ...
PFRDA eases NPS rules, allowing four pre-retirement withdrawals, clearer 25% limits and loans against NPS corpus for ...
A new withdrawal method called “Systematic Unit Redemption (SUR)” has also been introduced. Under this method, subscribers from both government and private sectors can gradually withdraw units from ...
According to a PFRDA notification, a non-government subscriber can withdraw up to 80% of fund accumulated amounting more than ...
The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority (PFRDA) has introduced significant changes to the National Pension ...
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