7th CPC Implementation Can Happen By Middle Of 2016 And Not Be Pushed Out Too Late: Rakesh Arora
The
seventh pay commission, headed by Justice AK Mathur, last month submitted its
report to Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. The recommendations, once cleared by
the Cabinet, will lead to a hike in salaries of central government employees
and pensioners with effect from January 1, 2016.
![]() |
7th CPC |
However,
there is no certainty that it would happen even in the next six months,
according to Rakesh Arora, managing director and head of research, Macquarie
India.
“And
still there is no guarantee that it is going to be implemented in the next six
months, it is still for the government to really consider.
“So
what we are saying is from the timing it can happen by middle of 2016 and not
be pushed out too late.”
The
financial burden of the 7th Finance Commission recommendations is huge but the
government has planned to cushion its impact by opting for its implementation
in stages and not at one go.
The
strategy involves pushing back the date of implementation of the pay commission
award so that the government saves on payment of allowances. The headline
financial impact figures that the commission gave while making its
recommendations are enough to unnerve anyone. The recommendations, if
implemented fully, are expected to increase the total spending by the
government on salary and pensions by a whopping Rs 1.02 lakh crore.
The
strategy that the government is working on is aimed at limiting the increase in
salary payout to Rs 55,000 crore for the next financial year beginning mid-
2016.
The
pay panel has said that the salary increase, as per the recommendations, should
be applicable from January next year. If the report is implemented from a later
date, the government will have to pay only salary arrears for the previous
months. In effect, these arrears will not include allowances.
The
burden of enhanced allowances is expected to be Rs 29,300 crore annually. The
other component of the government’s cushioning plan is to roll over some
payments to financial year 2017-18.
Of
the total additional burden of salary and allowances stemming from
implementation of pay commission’s recommendations, around 28 per cent will be
borne by the Railways from its own resources. For servicing a higher pension
payout, the burden on the general budget will be Rs 33,700 crore. The overall salary
and pension bill for the central government, excluding railways, is expected to
be Rs 1.88 lakh crore this fiscal.
Of
the total, around Rs 88,000 crore will be on pensions only. In the next
financial year, the total outgo is expected to be higher at Rs 2.4 lakh crore.
The
government has said that, despite the pay panel burden, it would stick to the
target of bringing down the fiscal deficit to 3.5 per cent of the gross
domestic product in 2016-17 from 3.9 per cent in this financial year.
According
to estimates, the burden of the pay panel recommendations will be equivalent to
0.4 per cent of the gross domestic product in 2016-17.
So to
keep the deficit within the target, the government may be forced to prune
expenditure and aim for higher non-tax revenues from streams such as
disinvestment or auction of natural resources.
Source:
NDTV
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please give your valuable comments.