Growth has fallen in the last couple of years
eroding revenue while inflation remains stubbornly high. The new pay commission
will have to factor in both concerns
Why does the government appoint a pay commission every decade?
A pay
panel is appointed every decade to review and recommend the pay structure for
central government employees taking into account various factors such as cost
of living, inflation rate, revenue growth and fiscal deficit of the government,
growth in workforce, private sector job scenario and wages, and economic
growth. The government has so far appointed six pay commissions. The demand for
a permanent pay commission set up through an Act of Parliament has been raised
once but it was not accepted by the government.
Earlier
this month, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh approved the constitution of the
Seventh Pay Commission—to be headed by retired Supreme Court judge Ashok Kumar
Mathur—to suggest the extent of hike in salaries of the 7-million-plus central
government staff and pensioners with effect from 2016. Petroleum secretary
Vivek Rae has been appointed as a full-time member, NIPFP director Rathin Roy
will be part-time member and Meena Agarwal will be member-secretary of the new
pay panel.
How did the process of pay hikes evolved?
The pay
panel recommendations have evolved with time. The first central pay commission
(CPC) adopted the concept of “living wage” to determine the pay structure of
the government staff. The third CPC adopted the concept of “need-based wage”.
The fourth CPC had recommended that the government constitute a permanent
machinery to undertake periodical review of pay and allowances of its
employees, but this was not accepted by the government. The sixth CPC suggested
performance related incentive scheme (PRIS) to replace the ad hoc bonus and
productivity-linked bonus schemes. The pay panel also suggested that the
running pay band be extended to all grades of officers. Also, the sixth pay
panel suggested slashing of the number of grades to 20 and one distinct pay scale
for secretaries from the 35 existing earlier.
By how
much have the public sector salaries increased every decade following the pay
panels’ recommendations?
By and
large, the salaries of central government staff have tripled every decade. The
sixth CPC suggested 3 times increase in salaries from that of fifth CPC
levels—it was 2.6 times for lower grade officials and slightly above 3 for
higher grade staff. The increase in salary during fifth CPC was 3-3.5 times the
fourth CPC levels.
What has been the fiscal implication of pay hikes?
Government
finances have come under strain after implementations of each CPC. After the
fourth CPC, the combined fiscal deficit of centre and states rose to 9.5% of
GDP in FY87 from 7.7% in FY86. The impact was significantly harsh during the
fifth CPC, especially for states—the combined fiscal deficit rose from 6.1% in
FY97 to 7% in FY98 and then to 8.7% in FY99 with the aggregate deficit of
states surging from 2.6% to over 4%.
In the
case of the sixth CPC, the government expenditure increased by about Rs 22,000
crore during 2008-09—Rs 15,700 crore on the general budget and Rs 6,400 crore
on the rail budget. The Rs 18,000 crore arrears were distributed in two
years—40% in FY09 and 60% in FY10. The fiscal implication of sixth CPC coupled
with fiscal stimulus in the form of higher spending and tax cuts after the
Lehman crisis, increased Centre’s fiscal deficit to 6% in FY09 and 6.5% in FY10
from less than 3% in FY08.
What are the challenges before seventh CPC?
The new
pay panel faces many challenges when it starts the process of reviewing the pay
structures of babus. First, the economic growth has slowed sharply in the last
10 years—from over 9% between FY06 and FY08 to 4.5% in FY13. This means slower
revenue growth and little room for scaling up expenditure on salaries.
Second,
the Fiscal Responsibility and Budget Management (FRBM) target has already been
revised more than twice after the Lehman crisis and the new target for lowering
the fiscal deficit target to 3% of GDP is FY17. This again binds the government
to restrict spending on salaries and wages.
Third
and the most important factor, inflation has stayed high in the past few
years—the CPI inflation (CPI-Industrial Workers and the new CPI) has averaged
over 9% in the past eight years, which means cost of living has gone up
significantly and hence necessitates higher compensation for workers. The
dearness allowance of government staff has already touched 100%, which along
with the rise in other allowances have more than doubled salaries since 2006.
Analysts
expect the seventh pay panel to suggest 3-3.5 times hike in salaries across
various grades from sixth CPC levels apart from a further rationalisation of
government staff. Already, direct or permanent jobs in public sector have been
shrinking while engagement of contract labour and outsourcing is on the rise.
This trend is likely to continue given the fiscal imperatives of the
government.
There is
a perception that government salaries should rise faster at the higher grades
and slowly at the lower grades to keep pace with private sector. It needs to be
seen whether the seventh CPC retains the minimum:maximum ratio at sixth CPC
level of 1:12. A hike in the ratio should not impinge the fisc much as the top
level officials—joint secretaries and above—comprise less than 5% of the
overall public sector workforce. The performance related incentives could also
be reviewed to retain talent within the public sector. More than the fiscal
implication, what matters is the productivity of the public sector. For
instance, sluggish clearances needed for large projects have ruined investment
and halved the growth rate in last three years. The silver-lining of the next
CPC could be that it may boost the services sector growth and help revive the
faltering economy from 2016 as higher salaries boost spending on housing,
automobiles and consumer electronics.
Source
: http://www.financialexpress.com/
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