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What Arun Jaitley says on the employees salaries and the 7th Pay Commission

With their hopes dashed by Arun Jaitley, the employees have resorted an indefinite strike. Here are the details of the case.

The Central Government employees had their hopes dashed when the Government refused to increase the basic minimum pay beyond the recommendations of the 7th Pay Commission. Now the CG employees have said that they would go on an indefinite strike if the basic minimum pay is not hiked.

Indefinite strike

Union leaders say that they would go on an indefinite strike if the pay hike is not implemented. There is no other option but to go on a strike, the leader also said. How much more do we wait? There were all kinds of assurances that were made, but none of them were lived up to.

Jaitley the great betrayer

CG employees are most upset with Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. They said that he was the one who had assured to look into the pay hike issue. He has betrayed us and we will not keep quiet. How could the government play with the lives of the employees they ask.

All broke assurances

Assurances were given by a group of ministers including Home Minister Rajnath Singh and Finance Minister Arun Jaitley. On June 30, 2016, both ministers had assured that the high-level committee will increase the minimum pay and fitment formula. The assurance given to the NJCA leaders by the Group of Ministers (including Finance Minister) on 30-06-2016 is that enhancement of minimum pay and fitment factor (multiplication factor) will be considered favorably by the government, once the proposal in this regard is submitted to government by the proposed “High-Level Committee” within four months. Hence, the matter will come for the “consideration” of the government only after submission of the report by the High-Level Committee,” Jaitley had said in the Rajya Sabha. A letter written by D K Sengupta, deputy secretary to the Government of India stated that the Minimum Pay Hike and Fitment Factor doesn’t appear to be an ‘Anomaly’. “As against the Minimum Wage decided to be Rs 18,000/- by the Govt. w.e.f. 01.01.2016 while the Staff-Side has said that this should be not less than Rs 26,000/-and the multiplication factor ought to have been 3.714 and not 2.57. They have further asked for the pay matrix to be changed. Objecting to the methodology adopted by the 7th Pay Commission in computing the Minimum Wage, they have given a number of reasons like the retail prices of the commodities quoted by the Labour Bureau being irrational, adoption of the 12 monthly average of the retail price being contents to the Dr. Avkrovd formula, the website of the Agriculture Ministry giving the retail prices of commodities forming the basis of computation of minimum wage provides a different picture, so on and so forth. However, when one compares this item with the three situations given in DoPT’s OM. No. 11/2/2016-JCA dated 16th August 2016 and 20th February 2017, it does not appear that this satisfies any of them to be treated as an anomaly.”

Betrayed and frustrated over 7th Pay Commission

The CG employees have been arguing that despite the foreword to the Report making it clear in para 1.19 that the prevailing rate of increment is considered quite satisfactory and has been retained, an illustrative list appended by them shows instances where the pay, gone up after the addition of annual increment by 3%, falls short of what it would have been. They have quoted para-5.1.38 of the report also which states that the rate of annual increment would be 3%. While what the Staff-Side has stated has its own merits, the fact of the matter is that the principle followed here is whenever a stage of pay, after addition of an increment, falls short of the nearest hundred by less than 50, the employee would be entitled to get the amount mentioned in the immediately next cell in the Pay-Matrix. However, when the gap is that of more than 50, the pay, on an addition of an increment, is rounded off to the nearest hundred which travels backward. For instance, if staying at Rs 46,100/- one gets an increment @ 3%, instead of having his/her pay fixed at Rs 47,483/- (which is the exact figure), it will be Rs 47,500/- (thus gaining by Rs 13/-). Thus it is not a case of permanent loss as the loss in one year is made good in the second/third year. Considering this to be a situation of swings and roundabouts, this may not be treated as a case of an anomaly.

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