Prime Minister Narendra Modi will meet Finance Minister Arun Jaitley
and Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa today evening to discuss his views on
Pay Commission allowances, reported ANI. Jaitley is expected to present
the proposals regarding the said allowances before the Union Cabinet
for approval sometime soon. He, however, will be out of the country on
an official visit to Russia.
Jaitley, who is also looking
after the Defence portfolio, will leave for a four-day visit to Russia
on June 20. During his trip he will meet the Russian Defence Minister
Sergey Shoygu to discuss matters of technical cooperation in the field
of defence. He is expected to return by June 24.
This
means Jaitley will not be present for the Cabinet meeting scheduled on
Wednesday (June 21) later this week. He is responsible for tabling
proposals pertaining to allowance reforms mandated by the Seventh Pay
Commission, and modified later by the Committee on Allowances and
Empowered Committee of Secretaries (E-CoS).
The federal
Cabinet too is reluctant to discuss the matter in absence of its Finance
Minister as seen in the past two weeks. Twice the issue of reformed
allowance structure has been dropped from the Cabinet's agenda. First
time it was when Prime Minister Narendra Modi was away on his
four-nation foreign visit during the first week of June. Central
government employees were disappointed once again last week when Finance
Minister was away in South Korea.
The matter of central
government employees' allowances has been pending for almost one year
now and the hiccups seem to stick even towards the end. The Pay
Commission had recommended that out of a total 196 allowances, 52 be
discontinued entirely whereas 36 other allowances should be subsumed
under other allowances.
Apart from this, the pay panel called
for cutting down the House Rent Allowance (HRA) which constituted the
bulk of an employee's paycheck. The Pay Commission suggested HRA to be
brought down to 24 per cent, 16 per cent and 8 per cent of the basic
pay, to be paid according to the city the employee is positioned in.
The
preceding Pay Commission had pegged the same at 30 per cent, 20 per
cent and 10 per cent. The Cabinet formed the Committee on Allowances
under Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa in June last year after the central
government employees expressed their dissatisfaction against them. The
motive of this Committee was to look into the extensive changes
suggested by the 7th Pay Commission.
The Lavasa Committee
handed over its review report to Jaitley in April after consulting
representations from various government departments and agencies. After
approved by the Department of Expenditure, this report was forwarded to
E-CoS for their consideration and consolidation.
The Empowered
Committee submitted the report once again to the Finance Minister on
June 1. Reports state that the E-CoS has capped HRA rates between 25 per
cent and 27 per cent. The Cabinet may, however, approve rates higher than that to compensate for the delay in paying allowances as per new rates according to the 7th Pay Commission.
The
final move now is for Cabinet to approve the recommendations about the
allowance structure, has been awaited for two weeks now.
Source : http://www.businesstoday.in
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