Seventh Pay Commission seeks one-month extension from finance ministry
Written By Admin on August 18, 2015 | Tuesday, August 18, 2015
The panel headed by A.K. Mathur is
unlikely to recommend lowering of the retirement age or push for lateral
entry and performance-based pay
Finance minister Arun Jaitley. The Seventh Pay Commission was supposed to submit its report and recommendations to the finance ministry on 31 August. Photo: HT |
New Delhi: The Seventh Pay Commission, headed by justice A.K.
Mathur, has sought a one-month extension from the finance ministry and
is preparing to submit its report by the end of September. The
commission is unlikely to recommend the lowering of the retirement age
as rumoured earlier or push for lateral entry and performance-based pay.
The commission, set up once in every 10 years to review pay,
allowances and other benefits for central government employees, was
appointed by the previous government on 28 February 2014 and was asked
to submit its report in 18 months, which falls on 31 August.
“There are some data points that are missing, which we hope to get by
this month end. We are trying to submit the report by 20 September,” an
official of the commission said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The Sixth Pay Commission had submitted its report a little ahead of
its deadline on 24 March 2008. The revised pay scales were implemented
retrospectively starting 1 January 2006, while recommendations relating
to allowances were implemented prospectively.
The finance ministry apprehends that salary and pension expenditure
will both rise by around 16% in 2016-17 as a result of the
implementation of the Pay Commission recommendations. This may allow
capital expenditure to grow by no more than 8% during the year, leaving
little room to aggressively push for an infrastructure build-up.
“The Pay Commission impact may have to be absorbed in 2016-17. The
phase of consolidation, extended by one year, will also be spanning out
in this period. Thus, in the medium-term framework, the fiscal position
will continue to be stressed,” the finance ministry said in the 2015-16
budget presented in February.
The official cited earlier said the Pay Commission report needs to be
effective from 1 January 2016, or by April 2016 at the latest.
“It will be the government’s prerogative when to implement it. But
beyond 1 January 2016, there will be arrears. But then, the government
will be subject to criticism. Earlier, they had hidden behind Pay
Commissions giving late reports,” he added.
However, the official said the commission is likely to maintain the
status quo on the retirement age of central government employees,
currently 60 years. “We are not going to either recommend lowering or
raising the retirement age. If we lower the age limit, the pension
burden will bust the government’s medium-term fiscal targets,” he added.
Asked whether government has sent any directives to the commission on
the kind of hike it can afford, the official said the message it has
got broadly is to keep the hikes low. “Merge the basic with dearness
allowance, don’t stretch it beyond—that is the message. But that is a
good message for the government to send. But there is no pressure
otherwise. In fact, there is a lot of cooperation,” he said.
The official said merging basic pay with dearness allowance, which is
mandatory, would itself mean a 155% rise for central government
employees. “We have to decide how much to give above that. So, it will
look good if you compare basic to basic,” he added.
On whether the commission will recommend performance-based pay bands,
he said it will make some feasible recommendations, though he couldn’t
guess if the government would accept them. The Sixth Pay Commission had
also recommended performance-based pay revisions, but the government is
yet to implement them.
“Eighty-eight percent of central government employees are industrial
and non-industrial workers working with railways, post, paramilitary and
army. So, performance-based pay revision is the wrong instrument for
them. Biggest growth in government services is in paramilitary forces,
where staffs in Central Reserve Police Force and Central Industrial
Security Force have gone up by 75-80% in the last 10 years. By the time
we have dealt with them, the bureaucracy is an afterthought. It does not
affect anything,” he added.
D.K. Joshi, chief economist at rating agency Crisil Ltd, said the
government is expected to be restrained in its pay hikes this time
around, given the low inflation level and tepid growth momentum. “The
last two Pay Commissions had significantly bumped up demand and fiscal
deficit. But the government is unlikely to be populist this time. It has
already showed restraint in the hike in minimum support prices for
farmers,” he said.
However, Joshi said the Pay Commission will have a permanent income
effect as well as a one-time impact through the payment of arrears,
which will lead to increase in demand for consumer durables.
Source : http://www.livemint.com/