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High Allocation for Defence Pension

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February 06, 2020

Why in News?

The Union Budget for 2020-21 has allocated Rs 1,33,825 crore to defence pensions which is up by 10½ times the allocation made in 2005-06.

How much allocation is made?

  • Allocation - This budgetary allocation is 4.4% of the total expenditure of the central government or 0.6% of GDP.
  • Of the overall allocation made to the Defence Ministry, 28.4% goes towards pensions.
  • The bill for defence pensions has gone upper than the Defence Ministry’s total capital expenditure.
  • It now nearly equals the salaries bill for Defence Ministry.
  • The more the government spends on salaries and pensions, the less it can spend on modernizing the armed forces.
  • Comparison - To compare it with other sectors, the government’s rural employment scheme MGNREGA has an allocation of 46% of the bill for defence pensions.

Why the bill is high?

  • As per the Defence Ministry, there are about 26 lakh armed forces pensioners and family pensioners, and approximately 55,000 pensioners added every year.
  • In 2015, government announced the OROP (One Rank, One Pension) scheme that cost it Rs 8,600 crore.
  • The implementation of the 7th Pay Commission’s recommendations in 2017 again increased the defence pensions bill.

How defence pensions are unique?

  • Defence personnel retire at a young age and thus continue to get pensions for a longer period than their civilian counterparts do.
    1. The current ratio of military pensioners to serving military personnel is 1.7 to 1
    2. The current ratio of civil pensioners to civil working personnel is 0.56 to 1.
  • This ratio in defence is projected to further change as life expectancy in India goes up and retired personnel live far longer than earlier.
  • All civilian employees in the government who joined service on or after 1 January 2004 do not get an assured pension but come under the ambit of the contributory National Pension Scheme (NPS).
  • However, military personnel have been excluded from the ambit of the NPS because of their short service span.

Where this can lead?

  • With economic growth stalling and competing requirement from development and infrastructure sectors, the government is being hard-pressed for the last rupee in its kitty.
  • The defence services themselves need more funds to modernise themselves but are struggling with budgetary allocations.
  • In such a scenario, attention is likely to come to the fast-rising defence pensions bill.

What could be done?

  • Increasing the retirement age - To keep the bill frozen at the same level, a short-term solution is to increase the retirement age of serving military personnel and stop the rise in number of pensioners.
  • However, the country is facing an all-time high unemployment and stopping recruitment for a few years now will worsen the situation.
  • Sending to the paramilitary forces - To send the retired military personnel to paramilitary forces is another soliution.
  • But those forces too need to stay young and have not accepted the proposal.
  • That would also pose the problem of recruitment in a time of high unemployment, as in the case of increase in retirement age of military personnel.
  • A Solution - Unless India’s economy grows at a double-digit rate, it will not be possible to handle the challenge of the sharply rising defence pensions bill and still modernize the armed forces.
  • There are no easy answers to the challenge, and the answer will have to come from the top political leadership.

 

Source: The Indian Express

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