Interest rate on Public Provident Fund (PPF) scheme has been cut to 8.1 per cent for the period April 1 to June 30, from 8.7 per cent, at present.
Similarly, the interest rate on KVP will be reduced to 7.8 per cent from 8.7 per cent while senior citizen savings scheme of five years would earn 8.6 per cent interest compared with 9.3 per cent.
Terming the decision slashing of interest rates as a "normal exercise of resetting" rates in March every year, Economic Affairs Secretary Shaktikanta Das said, "this will enable banks to consequently reduce their deposit rates and extend loan and credit to public and borrowers at lower rates."
However, unlike previous years when interest rates were set for the full year, the government will from now on set interest rates every quarter based on previous three-month yields on Government-Securities or G-Sec.
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A five-year Monthly Income Account will fetch 7.8 per cent as opposed to 8.4 per cent now.
"This is being done to make small saving interest rates more market linked and more market aligned," Das told reporters.
Asked when banks will cut rates, he said, "Banks will have to decide on their own. Government has given signals to them. It is for the banks to take decision and move forward."
"On the basis of the decisions of the government,
interest rates for small savings schemes are to be notified on quarterly basis," the order said announcing the rates for the first quarter of fiscal 2016-17.
The government had on February 16 announced moving small saving interest rates closer to market rates. On that day, rates on short-term post office deposits was cut by 0.25 per cent but long-term instruments such as MIS, PPF, senior citizen and girl child schemes were left untouched.
This advantage has been withdrawn with effect from April 1, 2016, the Finance Ministry said.
On February 16, the government had left Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana, Senior Citizen Savings Scheme and the Monthly Income Scheme (MIS) -- which command 0.75 per cent, 1 per cent and 0.25 per cent higher interest rate respectively than G-secs -- untouched, saying they are linked to social security goals.
But today, the interest rates on all these deposits have been cut.
Kisan Vikas Patra or KVP that currently provides for doubling of principal in 100 months (8 years and 4 months) will now be doubled in 110 months (9 years and 2 months) after the interest rate revision.
In February, the government had stated that the cut in small savings interest rate would help the economy move to "a lower overall interest rate regime eventually and thereby help all, particularly low-income and salaried classes".
"This shall be permitted with a penalty of 1 per cent reduction in interest payable on the whole deposit and only for the accounts having completed five years from the date of opening," it added.
The interest rate for every quarter would be decided on the 15th of the preceding month.
So, for the April-June quarter, rates should have been set on March 15 but they were delayed. The rates for April-June quarter are based on G-Sec rates that prevailed in the previous three months -- that is December, January and February.