November 20, 2015
The seventh Pay Commission, headed by Justice AK Mathur, on Thursday submitted its report to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.
November 20, 2015
The seventh Pay Commission, headed by Justice AK Mathur, on Thursday submitted its report to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley.
The recommendations, once cleared by the Cabinet, will lead to a substantial hike in salaries of central government employees and pensioners with effect from January 1, 2016. The salary hikes are expected to boost sales of affordable homes and consumer durables, which in turn will drive demand in the economy.
Here are 10 big recommendations of the seventh Pay Commission:
- Basic salaries of 47 lakh serving government employees will go up by 16 per cent, while their allowances will rise by 63 per cent. As a result, the overall hike in salaries will be 23.55 per cent. This compares with the 35 per cent salary hike central government employees got on implementation of the sixth Pay Commission in 2008.
- The house rent allowance has been increased by a massive 139 per cent; 52 allowances have been done away with, while 36 allowances have been subsumed in existing allowances or in newly proposed allowances.
- Pension of 52 lakh retired employees will go up by 24 per cent, according to the recommendations of the seventh Pay Commission.
- A virtual one-rank-one-pension for civilians has also been proposed for the first time. This is likely to be along the lines of the recently approved OROP for armed forces.
- The minimum salary for central government employees has been fixed at Rs 18,000 per month. The salary for employees in the apex scale has been capped at Rs 2.25 lakh per month. However, the salary of cabinet secretary (the highest-ranking civil servant) has been fixed at Rs 2.50 lakh per month.
- Central government employees will get an annual increment of 3 per cent. The seventh Pay Commission has also recommended the abolition of grade pay and pay band for central government employees.
- Introduction of a health insurance scheme has been recommended. Many steps have been recommended to improve the New Pension Scheme (NPS).
- Military Service Pay (for armed forces) for service officers has been more than doubled to Rs 15,500 per month. Short service commissioned officers will be allowed to exit the armed forces at any point in time between 7 to 10 years of service. A uniform retirement age for all paramilitary forces at 60 years has been proposed.
- The government will incur and additional expenditure of Rs 1.02 lakh crore to pay higher salaries and pensions recommended by the seventh Pay Commission. Of this, Rs 28,000 crore will go for salary hikes of railway employees.
- According to the finance minister, the implementation of the Seventh Pay Commission will impact the fiscal deficit by 0.65 per cent of GDP.
Courtesy: NDTV