7th CPC recommendations will have no impact on the fiscal deficit in the current fiscal year
The implementation of the 7th
Pay Commission’s recommendations will have no impact on the fiscal
deficit in the current fiscal, as budgetary provisions are enough to
meet the estimated outgo of Rs 60,400 crore in FY17, a senior official
said.
With the government broadly
accepting the pay- and pension-related recommendations of the Pay panel,
over one crore central government staffers and pensioners will get an
additional Rs 84,933 crore as recompense in FY17.
A finance ministry official on
condition of anonymity said that while Budget FY17 did not provide any
explicit provision for the Pay panel, some Rs 53,500 crore was built
into the allocations to various ministries and Rs 20,500 crore in the
rail budget.
“Most of the outgo related to
general budget has been provided for in the Budget. Only a small amount
(Rs 6,900 crore) will be required, which would be met from savings
during the year from budget allocations (for various departments),” the
official said. He, however, did not specify if these savings meant cuts
in capital spending.
Every year, the government makes
some savings due to the inability of many departments to spend their
allocated budget. These savings are often reallocated to needy
departments. The total spending budget for FY17 is Rs 19.78 lakh crore.
The Centre has set a target to
bring down fiscal deficit to 3.5% of GDP in FY17, from 3.9% in FY16.
Sources indicated that the tax revenue increase due to Pay panel award
had been factored in when the Budget was made.
Separately, the railways will
have to find another Rs 4,000 crore to meet the gap in budget provision
for pay and salary revisions in FY17. It has provided for Rs 20,500
crore in this year’s rail budget for salary hike.
The total impact on account of
revision in pay, allowances and pension would have been more, had the
Centre accepted the recommendations related to allowances along with pay
and pension in one go.
The Pay Commission’s
recommendation for a 63% rise in allowances (which would have inflated
the Centre’s and railways’ outgo by Rs 29,300 crore) has been put on
hold until a finance secretary-led committee reviews this along with the
commission’s suggestions for an overhaul of the 196-odd such benefits.
The committee will submit its
report in four months (by October). Officials don’t anticipate any
significant additional outgo on account of allowances this year as the
revised benefits are likely to be paid prospectively from next year.
Of the Rs 84,933-crore hit on
the exchequer this year, a recurring expenditure of Rs 72,800 crore is
due to pay and pension while Rs 12,133 crore is earmarked to pay arrears
from last financial year (the panel’s award will take effect from
January 2016).
On June 29, the Cabinet accepted the Pay Commission’s recommendations on pay and pension.
The minimum pay for the lowest
level staff will now be Rs 18,000 per month (Rs 7,000 earlier); while
the real increase pay/pension is 14.3%.
Source: Financial Express
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