NEW DELHI: Finance
Minister Arun Jaitley today virtually ruled out annual revision of pension as
demanded by agitating ex-servicemen under 'One rank, One pension' but said
government will safeguard interests of soldiers retiring at an early age
through higher pensions.
Annul revision in
pensions do not happen anywhere in the world, he said.
Jaitley said the
government was committed to OROP but the "only difficulty" is the
"arithmetical translation".
"I have my own
formula on what OROP means. Somebody else may have their own formula on OROP
but it has to be within reasonable and rational criteria. You can't have an
OROP where pensions are revised every month or every year," he said.
He said that recommendations
of 7th Pay Commission for government employees was coming shortly.
"I have been very
vigilant about fiscal prudence and therefore my job is really that of a
housewife in the sense that you must measure every rupee that the house spends
so that you don't overspend and then borrow and if you start borrowing beyond a
point and indulge in fiscal indiscipline," Jaitley told ET NOW.
Ex-servicemen have
been agitating for 78 days at Jantar Mantar here demanding implementation of
One Rank, One Pension, including annual revision of pension.
"We accept the
principle (of OROP). We will implement the principle but then let us not create
incidence which are going to set (precedent for) other segments of
the society to also start demanding (the same)," Jaitley said.
He, however, said,
"we would like to safeguard the interest of those soldiers who retire at
age of 35 or 38 years and the society must protect them... and therefore some
higher pension on a special formulation is understandable but then it can't be
revised every year."
Stating that the
Indian political thought process that thinks rationally will not make
"unreasonable concessions" merely on emotions, he said such a
move can set precedent for others to seek similar benefits.
"Can the BSF do it?
Can the CRPF do it? Obviously the thinking India will say it's not the right
step to take. You can't create a liability that the future generations will
have to pay. Therefore on a rational criteria OROP, we should certainly be able
to implement," he said.
Source
: http://economictimes.indiatimes.com
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