Monday, 7 December 2015

Implications Of VII CPC Recommendations As Illustrated With Example Of Pensions Of Lt Col

(Author: CoronaEight)

As mentioned in the previous blog-post, the grey areas regarding pension fixation for older retirees, as recommended by VII CPC, are best taken stock of in reference to actual examples.


Having touched on the vagueness surrounding pensions, as recommended for retirees in rank of Major, perhaps it is time to take a look at the other category of hapless armed forces retirees, the veteran Lt Cols.

It may be best to reproduce in enirety the recommendations of the pay commission regarding fixation of pensions as follows :

"10.2.87 The Commission recommends the following with regard to fixation of pension for past defence forces personnel retirees:

i. All the Defence Forces who retired prior to 01.01.2016 (expected date of implementation of the Seventh CPC recommendations) shall first be fixed in the Pay Matrix being recommended by this Commission, on the basis of the Pay Band and Grade Pay at which they retired, at the minimum of the corresponding level in the matrix. This amount shall be raised to arrive at the notional pay of the retiree by adding the number of increments he/she had earned in that level while in service, at the rate of three percent. Military Service Pay shall be added to the amount which is arrived at after notionally fitting him in the Seventh CPC matrix. Fifty percent of the total amount so arrived at shall be the revised pension.

ii. The second calculation to be carried out is as follows. The pension, as had been fixed at the time of implementation of the VI CPC recommendations, shall be multiplied by 2.57 to arrive at an alternate value for the revised pension.

iii. Pensioners shall be entitled to the higher of the two.

It is recognised that the fixation of the pension as per the above formulation (i) above may take a little time since the records of each pensioner will have to be checked to ascertain the number of increments earned in the retiring level. It is, therefore, recommended that in the first instance the pension, may be fixed in terms of formulation (ii) above, till final fixation of the pension under the Seventh CPC matrix is undertaken."

Let us ask some questions straight away:
  • Why has VII CPC not addressed the issue of OROP in that brief paragraph?
  • How has VII CPC spelt out the manner in which "equal service" for the same rank will be catered for in that matrix referred to in recommendations?
  • Why are the two illustrations given in the CPC recommendations, following that para, only of those who retired in the VI CPC regime? What about retirees who retired in the V or IV or III CPC regimes? In those days, they did not have "pay-bands" or "grade pay" refereed to in VII CPC recommendations.
The answer to all these questions is, of course, that the blogger does not have the faintest idea.

Though the title of this blog post has a specific reference to retirees in the rank of Lt Col, some of the doubts raised are general in nature and serve to point to a lack of answers in the recommendations.

To start with, where the para of recommendations states, "All the Defence Forces who retired prior to 01.01.2016...", is it just possible it intends to mean "All personnel of defence forces who retired between 01 Jan 2006 and 31 Dec 2015 in the regime of VI CPC"?

That could make some sense because in the context of armed forces, the number of increments for the same years of service, pay-bands, grade pay are the same for respective ranks for both VI and VII CPCs as reflected in the matrix. The matrix is, more or less, consistent if one considers retirees who retired and will retire between 01 Jan 2006 and 31 Dec 2015.

Example:

Let us take the case of a Lt Col with, say 21 years of service, who retired on PMR on 30 Nov 2015. For the sake of simplicity, we can assume this Lt Col was promoted to the, now time-bound, rank of Lt Col on 01 July 2007 at a service of 13 years. That means he had 8 increments to his credit based on which, in the VII CPC matrix, his notional pay parity, in level 12A, would be 143500/- and his post VII CPC pension, inclusive of MSP would amount to 79500/-

Now consider the case of a Lt Col, also with 21 years of service who retired in the regime of V CPC on 31 October 2003 before, what some would term the infamous, date of implementation of phase-I recommendations of AVS Committee, viz 16 Dec 2004. Assuming, this second Lt Col had picked up his rank at a service of 18 years in July 2000, he would have "earned" three increments in the pay-scale applicable to his pay-scale at the time. This second Lt Col would then be placed in level 12 A of VII CPC matrix at the notional pay parity point of 123800/- which corresponds to a VII CPC pension (inclusive of MSP) amounting to 69650/-.

We see here the possibility of two pre 01 Jan 2016 veterans in the rank of Lt Col, with the same service of 21 years, being placed at two different pension levels post 01 Jan 2016 at pensions of 79500/- and 69650/-. Clearly, the recommendations and the matrix do not reveal the full story.

Increments Or 2.57X:

Another inference that can be drawn from the recommendations is that the pension arrived at as per para 10.2.87 sub-para (ii), i.e. by using a multiple of 2.57, yields a post 01 Jan 2016 pension of 26265 x 2.57 = 67501.05 for retirees in the rank of Lt Col. In the matrix, it corresponds to some point in between 1 and 2 increments which have pension values of 66100/- and 67850/- respectively in level 12 A. So, at first sight it appears any Lt Col veteran with more than one increment would need to have his pension fixed based on increments rather than the one arrived at with the multiple of 2.57.

OROP And The Matrix:

The scenario gets murkier if we bring in the element of OROP. Some behind the scenes tinkering seems to be presently underway for preparing tables of OROP pensions to be effective from 01 July 2014.

The powers that be alone know what they intend to unleash by way of what they would then term as OROP, but in specific reference to the VII CPC matrix, would the 2.57X multiplier be used on pension of 26265/-, fixed by VI CPC, for Lt Cols or the OROP pensions, presumably based on years of service in the rank, expected to be thrown into the public domain shortly?

One of the aims of this blog-post is to underline the rather over-simplistic approach to illustrations in VII CPC recommendations referred to above. Some issues definitely arise when we shift to even a very simple example based on V CPC regime retirees as discussed in the preceding paragraphs.

It is also seen that the recommendations could raise lots of other questions in the context of OROP.

As an example, would the pensions of VI CPC retirees be first fixed as based on the 7 CPC matrix and pensions of V CPC and earlier regime Lt Col retirees then adjusted under OROP, based on equal service, with the pensions of VI CPC Lt Col retirees?

In the above example, the retiree under V CPC regime would then have his pension fixed at 79500/- and not 69650/-, as based on years of service and not increments earned for parity with a VI CPC retiree, the latter having his pension fixed on basis of increments as per the VII CPC matrix.

An Alternative:

This was suggested previously elsewhere. One other approach could be to review the term "increments earned" used in the above-mentioned para of VII CPC recommendations. 

The increments required to be considered would be those required to attain the actual years of service put in by a retiree when considered in the specific level of the matrix.

In the example of the Lt Col, considering that level 12A of the matrix starts at a service of 13 years, all previous Lt Col retirees with 21 years of service would need to have post 01 Jan 2016 pensions fixed at increment stage of 8 as 13+8=21.

The increment stage would need to apply to all past Lt Col retirees with 21 years of service for fixing their pensions and not the increments actually earned by them in the pay-scale of Lt Col. Those increments could have been as low as just 1 in the case of a Lt Col who had picked up the Lt Col rank at service of, say, 20 years in the regime of IV or V CPC and then taken PMR at 21 years of service.

A table could bring out the probable relationship between the increments earned component of the VII CPC Matrix vis-a-vis the number of years of service that these increments currently correspond to :


Notional VII CPC Pension Points For Lt Col With Corresponding Years Of Current Service
Increments Earned In Context Of VII CPC Matrix
Pay In Level 12A Applicable to Lt Col As Defined In VII CPC Matrix
MSP
Pension Inclusive Of MSP
Corresponding Current No. Of Years Of Service In Level 12A Applicable To Lt Col With Starting Point At 0 Increment For Level 12A Of Lt Col Being 13 Years Of Service
1
116700
15500
66100
14
2
120200
15500
67850
15
3
123800
15500
69650
16
4
127500
15500
71500
17
5
131300
15500
73400
18
6
135200
15500
75350
19
7
139300
15500
77400
20
8
143500
15500
79500
21
9
147800
15500
81650
22
10
152200
15500
83850
23
11
156800
15500
86150
24
12
161500
15500
88500
25
13
166300
15500
90900
26
14
171300
15500
93400
27
15
176400
15500
95950
28
16
181700
15500
98600
29
17
187200
15500
101350
30
18
192800
15500
104150
31



There will be additional complications when examples of retirees who retired in VI CPC regime but picked up their Lt Col ranks post AVS-I in V CPC regime.


For the time being, the issue of Lt Cols who had retired with 26 years of service in V CPC regime prior to implementation of AVS-I has not even been touched on. That needs to be dealt with separately.
Author: CoronaEight
Saturday, 5 December 2015
http://cuttingedge2.blogspot.in/2015/12/implications-of-vii-cpc-recommendations.html

Shared by Col Sandeep Pandit
[Tri Services Veterans]

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