Finance ministry braces for 7th Pay Commission recommendations: LiveMint Article
Salary, pension costs set to grow 15.8% and 16%, respectively, in FY17, leaving govt less money to build capital assets
New
Delhi: The finance ministry is apprehensive about the recommendations
of the Seventh Pay Commission, expected this month, significantly
increasing the revenue expenditure of the government in the next fiscal,
leaving it less money to spend on building capital assets.
Total revenue expenditure is
expected to jump 8.1% to Rs.16.6 trillion in 2016-17 against a budgeted
growth of 3.1% in 2015-16. During the same period, growth in capital
expenditure is expected to slow to 8%, at Rs.2.6 trillion, from a
budgeted growth of 25.4%.
The finance ministry
said award of the Seventh Pay Commission’s suggestions, with their
consequent impact on government finances, “poses a risk”.
The
government appointed the Seventh Pay Commission on 28 February 2014
under chairman, Justice Ashok Kumar Mathur, with a time frame of 18
months to make its recommendations.
“The pay
commission impact may have to be absorbed in 2016-17. The phase of
consolidation, extended by one year, will also be spanning out in this
period. Thus, in the medium-term framework, the fiscal position will
continue to be stressed,” the finance ministry said in the 2015-16
budget presented in February.
The Union budget
cut the plan expenditure for the first time in many years by Rs.2,657
crore to Rs.4.7 trillion in 2015-16 from the revised estimate of
2014-15, as the centre shared an additional Rs.1.86 trillion with
states.
The Finance Commission has raised the united share of states in net central taxes to 42% from 32%.
The
tight fiscal situation forced the government to revise its fiscal
consolidation road map and set a less ambitious fiscal deficit target of
3.9% of the gross domestic product (GDP) for 2015-16 against the
earlier target of 3.6% set in last year’s budget.
The Sixth Pay Commission, which was constituted in October 2006, had submitted its report in March 2008.
As
a result of the recommendations of the Sixth Pay Commission, pay and
allowances of Union government employees more than doubled between
2007-08 and 2011-12—from Rs.74,647 crore to Rs.166,792 crore, according
to the Fourteenth Finance Commission (FFC) estimates.
“As
a ratio of GDP, it jumped from a little over 0.9% in 2007-08 to 1.2% in
2008-09 and about 1.4% in 2009-10 on account of both pay revision and
payment of arrears. However, it moderated to a little over 1% in
2012-13,” the Finance Commission said.
The
recommendations of the Sixth Pay Commission were implemented by states
with a delay mainly between 2009-10 and 2011-12, with “significant
expenditure outgo”, FFC said.
FFC had said
that while the finance ministry projects an increase in pension payments
by 8.7% in 2015-16, a 30% increase is expected in 2016-17 on account of
the impact of the Seventh Pay Commission, followed by an annual growth
rate of 8% in subsequent years.
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