Seventh Pay Commission: Delay salary hikes, five states tell Centre
As
per the Media reports, some states have asked the Centre to go slow on
implementation of the Seventh Pay Commission’s recommendations. Full report is
being presented here.
Seventh
Pay Commission: While salary revisions are due in these five states, the states
which follow a different wage revision cycle, such as Andhra Pradesh, will not
be impacted by the report.
7TH CPC REPORT |
AT
LEAST five fiscally-stressed states have asked the Centre to go slow on
implementation of the Seventh Pay Commission’s recommendations, seeking extra
time to be able to absorb similar pay hikes, government officials said.
States
usually follow the Central Pay Commission’s recommendations, and, with some
modifications, announce roughly similar salary hikes for state government
employees.
“There
are several states who have approached the Prime Minister’s Office, Cabinet
Secretary and Niti Aayog, seeking more time in implementation of the Seventh
Pay Commission’s report,” said a government official familiar with the matter.
The
five states are West Bengal, Tamil Nadu, Punjab, Uttar Pradesh and Odisha. The
suggested delay will give the states more time to equip themselves with
resources to meet higher salary bills.
The
Seventh Pay Commission, headed by Justice A K Mathur, submitted its report to
the government last month, recommending 23.55 per cent overall hike in pay,
allowances and pensions of government employees with effect from January 1,
2016. This means the Centre’s salary bill will increase by Rs 1,02,100 crore in
2016-17.
“Punjab’s
finances are under stress and the burden of the Pay Commission’s
recommendations will certainly have an impact… Our officials have informally
taken up the matter with the Centre,” confirmed Punjab Finance Minister P S
Dhindsa.
“Normally
they (states) adopt the Centre’s recommendations. This is the normal procedure,
but it certainly depends upon their (states’) financial health. Some of the
states have not even implemented the Sixth Pay Commission’s recommendation,”
Justice Mathur told The Indian Express.
“Some
of the states may have suggested (delayed implementation) to the government,
but I don’t think the Government of India is in a bad position,” he said.
When
contacted, Odisha’s Additional Chief Secretary (Finance Department), R
Balakrishnan said: “At this stage, we don’t want to comment on it.”
Despite
repeated calls and emails, West Bengal Finance Minister Amit Mitra’s office did
not comment on the report. In September, the West Bengal government set up its
Pay Commission to suggest a salary revision plan. The state commission is
expected to follow on the Seventh Pay Commission’s recommendations.
Uttar
Pradesh Chief Secretary Alok Ranjan said the state was yet to assess the fiscal
implication of the Seventh Pay Commission’s recommendations. The Indian Express
could not reach the Tamil Nadu government.
While
salary revisions are due in these five states, the states which follow a
different wage revision cycle, such as Andhra Pradesh, will not be impacted by
the Seventh Pay Commission’s report.
Andhra
Pradesh Principal Secretary, Dr P V Ramesh, said the state had revised salaries
with effect from April 1, 2015, and the next revision is due only in 2019. “We
follow a five-year pay revision cycle, which is not linked with the central
cycle. The Seventh Pay Commission, therefore, will not have an impact on us,”
he said.
Meanwhile,
the Union finance ministry has set up an implementation cell for processing and
implementing accepted recommendations of the Seventh Pay Commission.
Source : http://indianexpress.com/
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