"The
Committee on Allowances has been constituted vide order dated 22.07.2016. The
Committee is to examine the recommendations of the 7th CPC in regard
to various allowances having regard to the representations made by the Staff
Associations and the suggestions of the concerned Ministries/Departments and
make recommendations as to whether any changes in the recommendations of the
7th CPC are warranted and if so, in what form."
"The Committee has not submitted its report to the Government.The
deliberations of the Committee are in the final stages. Decisions on
implementing the Report will be taken after the Report is submitted by the
Committee."
As
stated by SHRI ARJUN RAM MEGHWAL, MINISTER OF STATE IN THE MINISTRY
OF FINANCE in Loksabha on 10th March 2017
Lavasa Committee yet to finalize report
A
panel headed by Finance Secretary Ashok Lavasa and tasked with
examining the 7th Pay Commission’s (7th CPC) recommendations on allowances
has been unable to reach a conclusion in its last scheduled meeting last
Friday. It will now have a few more meetings before submitting its report to
Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, Business Standard has learnt.
In late June last year, after implementing the CPC proposals on salary and pension for the central government’s 4.7 million employees, Jaitley had announced the Lavasa panel would examine the suggestions on allowances. It had time till October to give the report but this got delayed. The decision on allowances was postponed because the CPC wanted a number of these to be abolished or subsumed. Employee unions were opposed.
“There
were no conclusive decisions taken at the meeting last Friday. There
will be some more meetings. For now, the panel is not ready to give its report
to the Finance Minister,” said a senior government official aware of the
developments.
It
was earlier reported that the panel would submit its recommendations to the
government’s political leadership soon and the Centre could announce revised
allowances any time after March 11, the day of counting the votes for the five
Assembly polls, and probably before the second half of
the Budget Session of Parliament ends. That timeline now
seems doubtful.
No comments:
Post a Comment