Discontinue the Practice of Appointing Pay Commissions every 10 years – According to Mathur, this could be avoided if a system of annual salary hikes — as in the private sector — is implemented for government staff as well.
The Centre could discontinue the practice
of appointing pay commissions every 10 years to suggest salary revisions
for its staff, justice AK Mathur, chairman of the Seventh Central Pay
Commission (7th CPC), said. Instead, he said, the government could have a
mechanism for annual increment in salaries, taking into account all
aspects including the consumer prices. While the dearness allowance
offsets the impact of retail inflation on the salaries of government
employees, the salary increases are now accorded by way of the pay
commission-awarded “fitment” factor and annual increment.
Since pay commission awards come once in
10 years, the two to three years subsequent to each award tend to be
fiscally stressful for the government — the latest instances are FY09
and FY10, years when the Centre’s fiscal deficit exceeded 6% and states
too suffered major blows to their finances.
According to Mathur, this could be avoided
if a system of annual salary hikes — as in the private sector — is
implemented for government staff as well. “The government should review
the matter (salary of its staff) every year looking into the data
available to it and based on the price index,” he told.
The 7thCPC, which submitted its report to
the government on Thursday, has proposed an increase of 23.55% in the
pay (salary and allowances) of central government employees and similar
increase in pensions, which will become effective from January 1, 2016.
The additional payout is projected to be Rs 1.02 lakh crore in FY17, or
0.65% of GDP, making it difficult for the government to reduce the
fiscal deficit by 0.4% to 3.5% of GDP in the year. India Ratings in a
note said the actual impact of the 7th CPC award could be higher at Rs
1.27 lakh crore after taking into account the arrears for three months
(January-March) as the implementation will be from April 1, 2016.
Concurring with the Mathur, India Ratings
chief economist Devendra Pant said the huge salary revision after the
6th CPC award came at a time when there was a global slowdown and the
impact was severe on the exchequer for the initial two years. “A formula
needs to be developed by the government to implement salary revision in
every two or three years,” Pant said. The formula can take into account
benefits like fitment and annual increment, besides DA given in the
present pay commission format. If periodic revision was applied, the
cumulative impact of Rs 1.02 lakh crore of the 7th CPC would have been
spread over several years, rather than primarily in FY17 and FY18,
providing the government with better absorbing capacity. The pay
commission recommendations also put huge burden the state governments,
PSUs and central universities, which take their cue from the commissions
and undertake similar pay revisions.
Mathur said that the 7th CPC should take credit for timely submission of report which avoided the need for the government to pay massive arrears unlike in the case of the 6th CPC award (which came 31 months after the due date).
Mathur said the recommendation for a
virtual one-rank-one-pension scheme for both the civilian and armed
forces was one of the most important recommendations of the panel. “It
will be difficult for the government to go back on this,” he said. He
said the commission did not consider the OROP announced by the
government for armed forces earlier this year as it was not part of
their mandate.
Mathur said the panel’s recommendations
were in consonance with of the financial position of the government
conveyed to it and hence, “the present dispensation that we have given, I
think the government will be more keen to accept”.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Dear Reader,
Enter Your Comments Here...