Central government employees concerned over the volatile market conditions have demanded that the 8th central pay commission (CPC) assure minimum payout under the National Pension Scheme amid the program’s large exposure to equities, as per an NDTV Profit report.
A number of central government employees will retire in 2033 and representatives of All India NPS Employees Federation (AINPSEF) has submitted a memorandum to the 8th CPC on 10 May asking for assured pension under NPS, it added.
What is the present allocation under NPS?
For central government employees, 10% of basic pay and DA is allocated towards NPS Tier-I scheme. Meanwhile, the Centre contributes 14% of basic salary and DA.
What is the reason for assured pension demand?
As per the report, the body noted that for a Level 7 employee with close to 33 years of service, the combined NPS corpus at time of retirement would be ₹3.13 crore ( ₹1.30 crore employee contribution and ₹1.82 crore government contribution).
Taking pay progression into account, it estimates salary at time of retirement to reach ₹3.32 lakh with DA at 30%. AINPSEF has proposed that the government hold back its ₹1.82 crore contribution and instead offer fixed pension at 50% of last drawn salary, plus DA, as per the report.
The concern is that the government at present cannot recover funds as the current structure is built for long-term outflow of funds into NPS. It further pointed that for employees on lower pay scale (Levels 1-5) and shorter service periods, or those in irregular positions the pension support under current NPS structure is “minimal” and that this “creates serious insecurity among lower and middle-income employees”.
8th CPC: Consultation meetings ongoing
The 8th CPC held its first meetings with employee representatives last month. As part of the consultation process, it opened formal memorandum submissions held meetings in Delhi in March for stakeholder consultations; and meetings in April.
The panel has planned meetings with employee representatives in Telangana, Ladakh, Jammu & Kashmir and Delhi in May and June.
Notably, pension updates have been a consistent topic. The Joint Consultative Machinery (NC-JCM) on 28 April among other things, demanded that NPS be scrapped and the old non-contributory Unified Pension Scheme (UPS) be restored. The reasoning is that staff had previously foregone provident fund benefits to opt for pensions.
There is also a demand on behalf of retirees, which seeks to raise concern over introduction of One Rank One Pension (OROP) for civilian employees. They have demanded periodic revision of pensions, restoration of commuted pension after 11 years, and call for more meetings.
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