Likely Separate Pay Commission for Armed Forces while Prime Minister approves Constitution of 7th Pay Commission for Central Government Employees
India’s armed forces are likely to have their own pay panel for the first time since independence.
This comes as the government prepares to set up the
seventh Pay Commission to decide on salary hikes for the 50 lakh central
government employees, ahead of state
polls and national elections
due by May. The pay panel’s recommendations are expected to be implemented from
January 2016.
All three military
chiefs had written to the Defence Minister last year, asking for pay parity
with central government employees. The armed forces have also been demanding
the one rank one pension and one rank one pay rule.
They are also pushing for fixing rank pay and fixing
pay structure for jawans and junior commissioned officers (JCOs).
In June last year, Defence Minister AK Antony had
reportedly written to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on “growing discontent
among the services personnel due to the anomalies in payment and salaries.”
Mr Antony had said that service personnel,
ex-servicemen and pensioners were “equally agitated” and suggested that
corrective action be taken or “things may take a bad turn.”
A month later, the PM set up a four-member committee
of secretaries, headed by the Cabinet Secretary, to look into the demands. The
armed forces had then objected to the absence of military representation on the
committee.
Government salaries had been substantially hiked under
the sixth pay commission headed by Justice BN Srikrishna. The revised pays
fixed the salary of the Cabinet Secretary at Rs.90,000 a month and
Secretary at Rs. 80,000 per month, while making Rs. 6,660
as the minimum entry level salary.
Source: NDTV
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