Jammu and Kashmir will implement the recommendations of the 7th
pay commission from April 2018 to give a massive 23.5% hike to lakhs of
government employees and pensioners in the state, Finance Minister
Haseeb Drabu said on Wednesday, presenting his third consecutive budget.
Drabu
in his budget speech to the state assembly said the hike in salaries
and post-retirement payouts will be with retrospective effect from the
day when the commission recommendations were implemented by the central
government.
The central government announced the measure for its
employees in June last year and a majority of the states have also
implemented the recommendation of the pay panel fixing the minimum
monthly salary for an employee at Rs 18,000 from the earlier Rs 7,000.
The
maximum salary, as per the pay panel recommendations, is fixed at Rs
2.5 lakh for the Cabinet Secretary, which is more than double the
previous pay of Rs 90,000 a month for the country’s top bureaucrat. For
other officers in the top scale -- secretary or equivalent, the monthly
salary is now around Rs 225,000.
Drabu said his two previous
budgets focussed on micro finance and allocation in the industrially
backward state while the present budget aimed at operations.
He
proposed a reform in the government’s payment system and announced that
treasuries would be replaced by functionally aligned pay and accounts
offices (PAO) to monitor and control the purpose and objective of
payments, budgetary sanctions and ceilings, proper classification and
excess payment issues.
For all receipts and disbursements of the government, the PAOs would be departmentally aligned.
“They would deal with those heads of accounts which are related to the functions of their concerned departments.
“Instead
of receiving the receipts and disbursing the payments of numerous
departments in the treasury system, the PAOs would deal with just one
department.”
He said the new system would do away with the
practice of physically carrying bills, challans and invoices to the
treasuries for audit and invoice checking at the department level.
“Instead,
a computerised integrated financial management system (IFMS) will
process all those functions online. The new system will be in vogue from
October 1, 2017 and complete the transition by March 31 the next year,”
Drabu said.
He also said the state government has decided to
waive token tax collected from public transport operators for six months
beginning this July.
This was being done to mitigate the
sufferings of public transport operators due to shutdowns and curfews
during the months of unrest in the Kashmir Valley.
He also
announced that the services of all casual labourers working in various
departments of the state government would be made permanent from next
year while steps would immediately be taken to regularise the services
of those contractual labourers who had given their lands free of cost
for developmental purposes.
The budget proposals also provide for making Adhaar card compulsory for everybody who seeks a government job in the state.
He
said all government departments would get 50 per cent of their fund
allocations by February 10 and this would ensure that various projects
get started in right earnest without losing any time in the next fiscal.
Source : http://www.hindustantimes.com
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