7th Pay Commission – Dis-Advantages
to Government or Employees?
The Central
Government employees are scheduled to get salary hikes on the basis of the
recommendations by January 1, 2016. According to sources, the house rent
allowance too would see an increase by 20 per cent. But the most significant
recommendation is that 5 to 6 per cent of the annual increment would be
performance-based. There is also likely to be a provision of retiring
under-performing employees by the age of 55 or 30 years of service, whichever
is more. The Finance ministry has already opened its stand saying, the Seventh
Pay Commission will be mindful of the fiscal concerns of the government while
giving its report on new pay scales and remunerations for central government
employees and pensioners. So the question which arises in everybody’s mind is,
for whom the 7th Pay Commission is for? Is it for the Central Government
employees or for the Government? For Whose benefit is it working? For example
there is a rumour floating around that the CGHS facility is going to take its
last breath after 7th CPC. The Seventh Pay commission is planning to propose
health insurance scheme to replace Central Government Health Scheme (CGHS) at
highly subsidized rates. The pay panel will ask the central government to urge
the insurance industry to come up with feasible health insurance solution for
the central government employees and pensioners. The IRDA, the insurance
regulatory body of India, will be compelled to ask the health insurance
companies to offer a basic insurance to every central government employee and
pensioner, regardless of age or medical condition and will not be allowed to
make a profit of this basic insurance. Health insurance would be available for
central government employees and pensioners till death, the insured employees
and pensioners will have to pay 50% of the premium from their salaries and
pensions and the remaining 50% premium may be paid by the central government. The
CGHS is financed mainly through the Centre’s tax revenues. Though beneficiaries
do contribute a share of their wages towards premium, ranging from Rs 600 to Rs
6,000 a year depending on their pay scale, this accounts for just about 5 per
cent of the total expenditure. The government shells out the remaining 95 per
cent. However, now the Government is looking for ways to end the CGHS in its
current form and to move to an insurance based health scheme to cut costs. Recently,
the CG Employee’s Welfare Ministry released an announcement which has created
confusion and fury among the CG employees. In the announcement it has been said
that the senior officials have to analyse the service record and decide whether
employees who have completed thirty years of service or reached their 50th year
should continue their service or be advised to leave service after three months
notice. Does it take a management to learn that an official or an employee is
unfit to continue in service when he has reached his 50th year? Does it take
thirty years of continuous service to assess the efficiency of an employee? Then
what is the need for a probation period? After serving the Government for 30
years or till his 50th year, if somebody is asked to quit just like that,
giving some damn reason when he is old, appears rather inhumane. Unlike in the
private sector, the pay hike in government is a once-in-10-years-affair. The
Government need not and should not compare the Government employees with the
private sector. The private sector works on profit mode, but the government
organisations work in the service mode.
The NJCA at the Meeting of the Confederation held at Hyderabad on 09th October 2015 while endorsing the decision of the National Joint Council of Action (Railway, Defence & Confederation) to organize massive protest dharna at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi on 19th November 2015 and also Nationwide Protest Demonstration in front of all works spot & offices, has decided to further intensify the protest action against the negative attitude of the Government for the Unwarranted intervention of the Finance Ministry in the independent functioning of the Pay Commission by issuing a statement asking the 7th CPC to factor into its report the fiscal concern of the government and thereby to pressurize the commission not to recommend wage rise on the basis of a sound and scientific formulation and Causing engineered delay by the Government in the submission of 7th CPC report by granting four months extension upto 31st December 2015, even when the Pay Commission was ready to submit its report within the stipulated time i.e. 28th August 2015.
The NJCA at the Meeting of the Confederation held at Hyderabad on 09th October 2015 while endorsing the decision of the National Joint Council of Action (Railway, Defence & Confederation) to organize massive protest dharna at Jantar Mantar, New Delhi on 19th November 2015 and also Nationwide Protest Demonstration in front of all works spot & offices, has decided to further intensify the protest action against the negative attitude of the Government for the Unwarranted intervention of the Finance Ministry in the independent functioning of the Pay Commission by issuing a statement asking the 7th CPC to factor into its report the fiscal concern of the government and thereby to pressurize the commission not to recommend wage rise on the basis of a sound and scientific formulation and Causing engineered delay by the Government in the submission of 7th CPC report by granting four months extension upto 31st December 2015, even when the Pay Commission was ready to submit its report within the stipulated time i.e. 28th August 2015.