New Delhi: With the BJP-led NDA getting
trounced in Bihar assembly polls, is likely to push the implementation
of the Seventh Pay Commission in April, a move seen by many as a major
sop ahead of five state elections in May.
In Bihar, the Grand Alliance of Chief
Minister Nitish Kumar’s Janata Dal-United, Lalu Prasad Yadav’s Rashtriya
Janata Dal and the Congress won 178 seats in the 243-member assembly.
The Prime Minister Modi’s party carried
out the same campaign strategy as it had done during the disastrous
February Delhi polls, ironically, with the same humiliating results.
After it swept the Lok Sabha polls, the
BJP faced a major defeat in Delhi and Bihar State elections, party
strategists say the party paid a heavy price because of government
employees’ worries with inflation.
The Narendra Modi government’s
anti-government employees’ decisions also upset government employees, a
central government employees’ union leader said.
“We realised that government employees
are upset as it is becoming difficult for them to manage their household
expenses with the high inflation rate. They were clearly against us not
to merge 50 percent dearness allowance with basic pay before
implementation of Seventh Pay Commission,” a central minister told us.
“There was a sense of insecurity among
government employee who feared the media rumours that the pay commission
is planning to recommend the retirement age of government employees as
the completion of 33 years of service, or at the age of 58, whichever
comes first. We want to prove the false media rumours to implement pay
commission soon,” said the minister.
Accordingly, Central government will
implement the recommendations of the Seventh Pay Commission in April
after fund allocation in budget 2016-17, which will be possible
pre-election “special packages” for Assam, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, West
Bengal and Puducherry, which are all due for polls by May 2016.
The Seventh Pay Commission, which was set up by the UPA government, was required to submit its report by August-end.
The government constitutes the Pay
Commission almost every 10 years to revise the pay scale of its
employees and often these are adopted by states after some
modifications.
The Commission has already completed
discussions with various stakeholders, including organisations,
federations, groups representing civil employees as well as Defence
services and is in the process of finalising its recommendations.
The recommendations of the Seventh Pay Commission are scheduled to come into effect from January 1, 2016.
The Sixth Pay Commission was implemented
with effect from January 1, 2006, the fifth from January 1, 1996 and
the fourth from January 1, 1986.
Source : www.tkbsen.in/
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