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Tuesday, 29 December 2015

COMMUTATION OF PENSION - WHETHER OR NOT

COMMUTATION OF PENSION - YES OR NO - VALUE

Whenever any retiring officer approaches us for advice, invariably the question of whether or not to commute the pension comes up. This article deals with this issue so that all officers, retired or retiring, would be able to make up their mind more knowledgeably.


Commutation is defined as giving up part or all of the pension payable from retirement in exchange for an immediate lump sum. Commutation factors (usually calculated by the Scheme Actuary) are used to determine the amount of pension which needs to be given up in order to provide the lump sum.
आगे पढ़ने के लिए नेचे क्लिक करें   

Before we take a call on the same, a few connected issues need to be understood clearly:- Basic Pension is exactly half of your last drawn Basic Salary. And Basic Salary for the purposes of pension calculations is Basic + Grade Pay + Rank Pay. Whenever commutation is done, only the Basic Pension gets commuted, never the DA received. Thus, after commutation also, the DA is received on full value of Basic Pension. Commutation can be done of any value from 0% to 50%. However,
                                                                
generally almost all the officers get 50% commutation done, if they go in for it. Commutation is done based on a factor of commutation set by the Government which depends on the years of service that you’ve put in. To put it more simply, it is the time adjusted Present Value of your future pension. Pension is restored exactly 15 years after first commuted pension is received by you. Though not confirmed, probably commutation can still be done within one year of retirement, if the officer has not done commutation and wishes to change his decision. Now, let us understand the difference between a commuted pension and an uncommuted pension. We’ll understand it by an example.


Case Study - (6TH CPC Period))

The officer is a Col who has Rs 60,000 of Basic Pay, 8700 of Grade Pay and 6000 of Rank Pay, making it a total of Rs 74,700 of Basic Pay while serving. He will commute 50% of his pension, if he does so. He is in a dilemma what to do. A commutation factor of 8.88 is applicable to him. The DA is 119% at present. It means that he will be paid commutation value equivalent to 8.88 years (107 months) while he will continue to return the installment for 180 months catering for the rate of interest which Govt has fixed for present value of future payments.
TABLE EFFECTIVE JAN 2006



His Basic Pension is = Rs 74,700 / 2 = Rs 37,350.
If he does not commute the pension:- Monthly Pension received by him = Rs 37,350 + (119% of 37,350) = Rs 81,800./-

If he commutes the pension: Monthly Pension received by him = Rs 18,675 (ie, 37,350/2) + 44,446 (ie, 119% of 37,350) = Rs 63,121. HOWEVER , In addition, he will receive, a bulk commuted pension amount of Rs 19.9 Lakhs (ie, 18,675 X 12 months X 8.88 factor).

Analysis of Commutation Vs Non-commutation:

If you see the calculations above, the difference between commuted pension ie Rs 81800/-and non-commuted monthly pension 0f  Rs 63222/- since DA is paid on full pension is  not much amounting to only Rs 18578/- ,  an additional amount to be received every month.  He also gets a big sum of Rs 19.9 Lakhs in bulk. He would be able to generate long term returns of anything from 6% - 10% per annum net of interest, depending on where he invests his commuted amount keeping the safety of funds in view Rs 13270 per month at 8% simple interest leaving a gap of only Rs 5300/- between commuted and non- commuted pension.).. If he takes up re-employment or corporate job after retirement, for a few years, this small additional monthly amount will anyway not matter atall.

Commutation is better also  due to following three reasons:- 

(a) Difference between 50% commuted (maximum allowed) and uncommuted pension is not much on a per month basis. As such, for this officer and his wife, living in their own house, Rs 63,000 per month of commuted pension is normally quite adequate. 

(b)  The bulk amount is quite large. Apart from providing a big financial security, it can be prudently invested to generate the gap amount (between commuted and uncommuted monthly pension) while still retaining the bulk money with you in your kitty. 

(c) In case something untoward happens to the officer, the Government pays the same pension to the family of commuted and uncommuted cases, thus effectively ‘forgetting’ the commuted pension bulk amount given to the officer. This is a large welfare measure by the Govt

If the Officer retires after 01 Jan 2016, then  7th CPC applicable to him:

7th pay commission has increase his serving basic pay  by 2.57 times. Let us presume his last pay was 181200/- as per 7 cpc matrix plus MSP his  Basic pension  will be approx Rs 90,600 and hence if he does not commute the pension, he gets a Pension of Rs 90,600.plus DA.

If he commutes pension by 50%, his pension will be Rs 45,300 plus DA. And he gets a commuted amount of Rs 46.27 Lakhs.

Again, even with 7th pay commission effect, the gap between maximum commuted and non-commuted pension will not be much as bulk if he commutes by 50%.


7th CPC New Table for Commutation of Pension December 9, 2017 


Our Recommendations

We strongly recommend that all officers should commute their pension to the maximum allowed 50%. If the officers are also able to invest their commuted pension bulk amount wisely and carefully, there is not likely to be any difference (or a minor difference) in their take-home pension even after commutation while still having this large commuted bulk amount with them as a big security.


5TH CPC TABLE  -   Commutation Tables for Central Government Employees effective from 1.3.1971  Table-1






Commutation Tables for Central Government Employees Effective from 1.1.2006

Table 2 : Commutation values for a pension of Rs. 1 per annum as per Sixth CPC recommendations, effective from 1.1.2006










IMPORTANT NOTES 






Commuted value is the present value of the future series of cash flows required to fulfill a pension obligation. Commuted value is, therefore, the net present value of a future financial obligation. The total pension obligation is a product of long-term interest rates and life expectancy based on mortality tables. In other words it is the lump sum payout of the present value of an employee's earned pension. It is the money that would have to be invested today, based on current long-term interest rates and mortality rates, to generate monthly cash flows equivalent to the DB pension payment.


Is commutation of pension beneficial?

After commutation, only the basic pension is reduced for retired defence personnel, while they get the dearness relief (DR) benefits on the entire pension amount. ... The other added advantage of commutation is that while your pension would be taxable, the commuted lump sum amount is tax free.


Can family pension be commuted?

Pension received by a family member. Pension received by a family member is taxed under income from other sources in your Income Tax Return. If this pension is commuted or is a lump sum payment it is not taxable.Jul 20, 2018






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SELECTED ARTICLES FOR YOU

This post is in continuation of earlier posts on the subject as mentioned at the end of this post

The following articles are added on the subjects of Interest:-
* HOW I BECAME A SIGNALLER - by Maj Vijay Bhosle
AISA BHI HOTA HAI  - By Maj Vijay Bhosle (Published in The Signalman)
*  WORST-CASE SCENARIOS - WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF INDO-PAK WAR BREAKS OUT by Brig Gurmit Kanwal 
*   SOLDIER FIGHTS FOR THE COUNTRY BUT HE PAYS FOR HIS OWN INSURANCE FOR BEING MATYRED.
*  A RARE BREED OF PEOPLE SERVING THE COUNTRY !! WORTH READING AND THINKING ABOUT !!
DOES AADHAAR SERVE ANY PUBLIC INTEREST - social -



BIRTH CERTIFICATE VERIFICATION THROUGH CRS - Social -
WORST-CASE SCENARIOS - WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF INDO-PAK WAR BREAKS OUT by Brig Gurmit Kanwal - Military -
ARMAGEDDON THE INDIA-PAKISTAN WAR OF 2019 - Military -
SIX WARS, AND THE PEACE OF DALHOUSIE
BEFORE YOU POINT A FINGER AT THE INDIAN ARMY
OUT OF MY MIND - LAW’S DELAYS -
RISALDAR, HE HAD TO BE
US AMBASSADOR'S MEMO ON PAKISTAN
FOR OUR TOMORROW - CAPT VIJAYANT THAPAR - MILITARY



* ELECTRICUTED WHILE WORKING ON LAPTOP
*GENESIS OF MILITARY RANKS
* ABOLISH PERSONAL LAWS
* WHY SENIOR CITIZENS FLYING OPT FOR WHEELCHAIR
* EAT WHAT YOU WANT, BUT KNOW WHAT YOU EAT
* YOU THOUGHT YOUR LIFE WAS TOUGH
* RBI - FAQs PAYMENT OF PENSION THRO BANKS
* TEN DOCU - FOR CONTINGENCY
* WAR OF MESSES
* FITNESS - MEDICAL PARAMETERS
* CANCER - DIAGNOSED DONOT TAKE IT LYING DOWN
* CASTE SYSTEM - INDO PAK
* AARTI - FROM SIKH RELIGION
* JAI CHANDs -WHY DOES INDIA BREED SO MANY TRAITORS
* SIKH WARRIORS OF GREAT WAR
* WHEN FAUJI BLOOD BOILS
* LEAVES OF HISTORY
* SARDAR PATEL - FROM THE MEMOIRS OF MKK NAIR
* SARDAR PATEL'S LETTER TO NEHRU ON CHINA DATE
* WHY GANDHI OPTED FOR NEHRU AND NOT SARDAR PATEL
* ARMY ETHICS AND ETHOS
* SARDAR VALLABHBHAI JHAVERBHAI PATEL - THE IRON MAN OF INDIA
* FOR HINDUS FAR FROM HOME, ONLINE RELIGIOUS
* INDIA, WE ARE FIGHTING OUR OWN DISABLED SOLDIERS
* REMEMBERING A WAR: A POW IN TIBET
* WHEN WE LEFT THEM BEHIND
* YOU CAN SCRAP THE ARMY
* HOW TO APPLY FOR PASSPORT ON LINE
* FIFTY YEARS AFTER 1962 WAR
* DIABETES - WHATS NEW
* A HEARTLESS PROFESSION - MEDICOs
* अशोक वृक्ष - ASHOKA TREE
* SEVEN BLUNDERS THAT WILL ALWAYS HAUNT INDIA
* AMAZING CAMEL
* GROWING UP IN INDIA
* THE VALUABLE GIFT
* BIWI KI CHAKKAR
* SOLDIER’S LIFE
* WOH BHI KIA DIN THE
* I NEVER KNEW THAT ... WHY
* DAUGHTER'S RIGHT IN ANCESTORAL PROPERTIES
* HOW THE FIGHT STARTED
* WHY DOES INDIA BREED SO MANY TRAITORS
* ROPE ON SIACHEN
* HONY CAPT BANA SINGH, PVC - HERO OF SIACHIN
* KAHAN GAYE WOH DIN
* DOES THE SUN RISE IN EAST
* COSMIC WORD - OM
* ARYA SAMAJ AND ARYAS
* HOW DO NON-INDIANS VIEW SIKHISM


* A STORY OF LOVE
* YOU CAN LEAVE THE MILITARY - BUT IT NEVER REALLY LEAVES YOU
* REMEMBER SACRIFICES OF THOSE TO WHOM WE OWE OUR FREEDOM
*BUTLAR IN PUBLIC - BY LT COL SR JAFRI PAK ARMY
*WHEN YUSUF CROSSED THE LINE (loc)

* VICTORY IN THE VALLEY
* LIEUTENENT DID YOU DIE IN VAIN
* DON'T YOU QUIT
* BATTLE OF ASHUGANJ - 1971 BANGLA DESH
* WHY INDIA BECAME INDEPENDENT
* TIME LINE - LORD KRISHNA
* INDIA'S FIRST TRAIN -1853
* MUGHAL SHUGHAL
* JHANSI KI RANI
* 'महाभारत' के बाद क्या हुआ युधिष्ठिर और दुर्योधन का?
* DATING THE ERA OF RAM
* BHAGAT DHANA JI
* FIVE THINGS ABOUT INDIA'S INDEPENDENCE
* ANAND BAKSHI AND THE CORPS OF SIGNALS
* WINDOWS REGISTRY - TECHNOLOGY EASED
* 50 WW-II PICTIRES COLORISED

* SURGICAL STRIKE ON LAUNCHING PADS IN POK 









OUR OTHER  PAGES ON SELECTED ARTICLES:- 

1. SELECTED ARTICLES FOR YOU
2. VETERAN'S LIBRARY
3. SELECTED ARTICLES (PT-1) - A MUST READ
4. SELECTED ARTICLES (PT-2) - A MUST READ

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Dear Veterans,
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With best wishes
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Saturday, 19 December 2015

PENSION - EXPLAINED

HISTORY OF PENSION

Before 1-4-1927, the grant and audit of pension payments was the responsibility of respective pension sections of various Controllers of Military Accounts. From 1-4-1927, the pension work relating to Northern and Eastern Commands was centralised in the office of the Controller of Military Pension Accounts, Northern and Eastern Commands at Lahore. An office similar to the one at Lahore was also formed at Mhow a little later for dealing with all pension claims of Southern and Western Commands. With a view of securing uniformity of procedures. with regard to sanction and audit to pension, both the Central Pension Offices at Lahore and Mhow were subsequently amalgamated and located at Lahore only.




Controller of Navy Accounts, Bombay, Controller of Air force Accounts, Ambala and Controller of Army Factory Accounts, Calcutta were retained as separate Pension Sanctioning Authority with regard to their own establishment and also the establishment employed directly under their Audit Control.

The work relating to the grant and audit of pension of the personnel of Royal Indian Navy who were governed by Civil Service Regulations, was transferred to the Controller of Military Accounts (Pensions), Lahore w.e.f 1-11-1938. Similarly, the pension work relating to personnel of Military Accounts Department, serving in the office of Controller of Accounts, Air force, Dehradun was also transferred subsequently.

Due to the partition of the country on 15.8.1947, the office of the Controller of Military Accounts (Pensions), Lahore was also bifurcated and the pension work relating to Indian nationals was transferred to the office of the Controller of Military Accounts (Pensions), Allahabad in September 1947. The office commenced full-fledged functioning w.e.f 21.10.1947 under the administrative jurisdiction of the CGDA, New Delhi . The office was re-designated as CDA(P), Allahabad w.e.f. 8.9.1951.

The pension work relating to the establishment of CDA (Factories), Calcutta and also the Defence civilians employed in ordnance factories was transferred to the office of the CDA (P) Allahabad w.e.f. 17.1.52. Similarly, the pension work relating to the civilian personnel of Air force was also transferred in 1954.

The pension work relating to personnel of all the three wings of the armed forces and also the civilian employees serving in Defence establishments, was centralised at one place viz. Allahabad. This had been to secure uniformity in the application of rules and procedures regarding grant and audit of pension.

With a view to achieving promptness in settlement of pensionary entitlements of Naval and Air force personnel the work relating to grant of their pension was transferred to CDA (Navy), Mumbai and C.D.A. (Air force), New Delhi respectively w.e.f.1.11.85.

After undergoing a series of organisational changes, this office has been upgraded as the office of the Chief controller of Defence Accounts (pensions) w.e.f. 19.12.1988 and subsequently redesignated as the Principal Controller of Defence Accounts (Pensions), Allahabad w.e.f. 24.09.1999.


Various Type of Pensionary Awards


Retiring Pension
Retirement Gratuity
Disability Pension
Invalid Pension
Family Pension
War Injury Pension
Liberalised Pension
Commutation
Gallantary Awards


WHY ARE WE BEING PAID MINIMUM PENSION.

3500 IS THE MIN PENSION SCALE FOR ANY ONE AND WE AS PER GRADE ARE ALSO GIVEN THE MIN GUARANTEED PENSION WHY NOT AS PER FITMENT TO THE GRADE AND SERVICE WE HAVE RENDERED .

why minimum of the fitment table, it should be corresponding to the 5th CPC scale a Brig was actually drawing being fitted in in 6th CPC table as per SAI 2/S/2008. e.g. A pre 2006 Brig was drawing a Basic pay of 18050/= (max of scale) + 450/= (Stag Increment) a total of Rs 18,500/=. He will be fitted in the revised table at Rs 46,050/-. He will get a pension of 50% of ( 46,050 + 8900 (GP) + 6000 (MSP) Rs 60,950/= i.e. Rs 30,475/= In this case the retired Brig is getting Rs 1,330/= less of pension. (30,475/= - 29,145/= = Rs 1,330/=).


1. DEF PERS MUST KNOW THEIR PENSION ENTITLEMENT

We have made special efforts in hosting various details on Pensions for the Defence personnel i our blog site. We have covered following aspects in our blog;-

1. History of pension

2. Pension Officers and Arrears

3. Pension AMC/ADC/RVC Doctors and Arrears.

3. Pension JCOs and ORs - 6CPC Arrears

5 Check your Pension - Do it Yourself.

6. FAMILY PENSION

7. One Rank One Pesnion.

8. Commutaion of Pension.

9. Nomination

10.Endorsement of DOB of Spouse in PPO.



http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/08/pension-premature-retirees.html


PENSION


PENSION ISSUES & RELATED ORDERS http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/08/pension-issues-related-orders.html


FAMILY PENSION - DETAILED BRIEF http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/08/recently-uploaded-articles.html


PENSION & ARREARS - JCOs & ORs http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/05/pension.html

DEFENCE PENSION GUIDE 2007_complete - http://1drv.ms/1OirMSq

PENSION TABLES & ARREARS - JCOs & ORs - http://1drv.ms/1QwgWdQ

PENSION UNDER CONSTR -

PENSION - PREMATURE RETIREES http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/08/pension-premature-retirees.html

CHECK FOR CORRECTNESS OF YOUR PENSION - "DO IT YOURSELF" SOLUTION. http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/08/check-your-pension-and-arrears-all.html

O R O P - ONE RANK ONE PENSION http://signals-parivaar.blogspot.in/2015/01/one-rank-one-pension.html

OROP Judicial commission -- http://1drv.ms/1NlcYkb

6 सीपीसी के तहत जेसीओ और अन्य रैंकों के pesnion के बाद 10 अक्टूबर 90 से के रूप में XY और जेड समूहों के अंतर्गत वर्गीकृत किया गया था। पहले समूहों के तहत के रूप में फिर से संगठित कर रहे थे: - कॉलम के तहत के रूप में दिखाया 6 सीपीसी के दौरान पेंशन पीसीडीए (पी) परिपत्र संख्या 397 1 जनवरी 2006 से प्रभावी तहत refixed थे 'नीचे दिए गए चार्ट के बी "। इसलिए 30 जून 2009 से प्रभावी और के रूप में बढ़ाया गया तय पेंशन कॉलम के तहत दिखाया गया है' सी तैयार संदर्भ के रूप में 'ई' तालिका के। मूल पेंशन में अंतर कॉलम के तहत दिखाया गया है '। बकाया अंतर पेंशनरों को बैंकों द्वारा भुगतान किया गया साथ होने के कारण के रूप में।

PENSION COMMUTATION

Whenever any retiring officer approaches us for advice, invariably the question of whether or not to commute the pension comes up. This article deals with this issue so that all officers, retired or retiring, would be able to make up their mind more knowledgeably.

Before we take a call on the same, a few connected issues need to be understood clearly:- Basic Pension is exactly half of your last drawn Basic Salary. And Basic Salary for the purposes of pension calculations is Basic + Grade Pay + Rank Pay. Whenever commutation is done, only the Basic Pension gets commuted, never the DA received. Thus, after commutation also, the DA is received on full value of Basic Pension. Commutation can be done of any value from 0% to 50%. However, generally almost all the officers get 50% commutation done, if they go in for it. Commutation is done based on a factor of commutation set by the Government which depends on the years of service that you’ve put in. To put it more simply, it is the time adjusted Present Value of your future pension. Pension is restored exactly 15 years after first commuted pension is received by you. Though not confirmed, probably commutation can still be done within one year of retirement, if the officer has not done commutation and wishes to change his decision. Now, let us understand the difference between a commuted pension and an uncommuted pension. We’ll understand it by an example.


Case Study

The officer is a Col who has Rs 60,000 of Basic Pay, 8700 of Grade Pay and 6000 of Rank Pay, making it a total of Rs 74,700 of Basic Pay while serving. He will commute 50% of his pension, if he does so. He is in a dilemma what to do. A commutation factor of 8.08 is applicable to him. The DA is 119% at present.

His Basic Pension is = Rs 74,700 / 2 = Rs 37,350.

If he does not commute the pension:- Monthly Pension received by him = Rs 37,350 + (119% of 37,350) = Rs 81,800.

If he commutes the pension: Monthly Pension received by him = Rs 18,675 (ie, 37,350/2) + 44,446 (ie, 119% of 37,350) = Rs 63,121.

In addition, he will receive, a bulk commuted pension amount of Rs 19.9 Lakhs (ie, 18,675 X 12 months X 8.88 factor).

Analysis of Commutation Vs Non-commutation:

If you see the calculations above, the difference between commuted and non-commuted monthly pension is about Rs 18,680, which is not much of an additional amount to be received every month. And, he also gets a big sum of Rs 19.9 Lakhs in bulk. He would be able to generate long term returns of anything from 6% - 12% per annum net of tax, depending on where he invests his commuted amount. If he takes up re-employment or corporate job after retirement, for a few years, this small additional monthly amount will anyway not matter much to him.


Thus, commutation seems better than non-commutation due to following three reasons:- Difference between 50% commuted (maximum allowed) and uncommuted pension is not much on a per month basis. As such, for this officer and his wife, living in their own house, Rs 63,000 per month of commuted pension is normally quite adequate. The bulk amount is quite large. Apart from providing a big financial security, it can be prudently invested to generate the gap amount (between commuted and uncommuted monthly pension) while still retaining the bulk money with you in your kitty. In case something untoward happens to the officer, the Government pays the same pension to the family of commuted and uncommuted cases, thus effectively ‘forgetting’ the commuted pension bulk amount given to the officer. This is a large welfare measure by the Govt. If the Officer retires after 01 Jan 2016, ie 7th CPC applicable to him:

It is assumed that the 7th pay commission will increase his serving basic pay by 20%. Thus his serving Basic Pay will be Rs 89,640 and hence, Pension Basic Rs 44,820.

If he does not commute the pension, he gets a Pension of Rs 98,156.

If he commutes pension by 50%, his pension will be Rs 75,746. And he gets a commuted amount of Rs 23.88 Lakhs.

Again, even after pay commission effect, the gap between maximum commuted and non-commuted pension is only Rs 22,410 while the officer gets Rs 23.88 Lakhs as bulk if he commutes by 50%.

Our Recommendations

We strongly recommend that all officers should commute their pension to the maximum allowed 50%. If the officers are also able to invest their commuted pension bulk amount wisely and carefully, there is not likely to be any difference (or a minor difference) in their take-home pension even after commutation while still having this large commuted bulk amount with them as a big security.

Insurance.. Not charged from FP



REGROUPING OF PBOR RANKS

Groups for all ranks of PBOR have been introduced w.e.f. 01.06.1953. there were 8 groups initially i.e. A, B, C, D, E, F, G and H. These pay groups were regrouped in 5 (i.e. A, B, C, D, E) w.e.f. 01.01.1973 which further regrouped in 3 groups (X, Y & Z) w.e.f. 10.10.1997. Similarly, groups of Air Force, Navy are also given below for Pre-73 to Post 10.10.1997 and Pre 01.01.1996 to 10.10.1997. The groups have now been regrouped as follows-




ARMY



Basis : LIC (94-96) Ultimate Tables and 8.00% imterest.

Service Pension : Regular Army/Air Force/Navy/DSC

Definition:


Service Pension is a pension, which is sanctioned to a P.B.O.R. on Completion of his terms of engagement for the qualifying service Rendered by him in the Armed Forces.


Condition:


Minimum qualifying service without weightage to earn a Service pension is 15 years (20 years in case of NC (E))


Linkage of full pension with 33 years of Q.S. is dispensed with from 01.01.2006.


Now pension of PBOR will be calculated at rate of 50% of emoluments last drawn


or average of reckonable emoluments drawn during last 10 months which is more beneficial.


Authority : G.O.I. letter no 17(4)/2008 (2)/D(Pen/Pol) dated 12/11/2008.


The above calculated service pension shall in no case less than 50% of notional pay in the post – 01.01.2006 revised pay structure corresponding to the maximum of Fifth CPC pay scales including whole of classification allowance last drawn in the rank and group held of the time of discharge / invalidment. The amount so determined will be the pension for 33 years of reckonable qualifying service including improved weightage (except TA personnel) as given below at point IV. For lesser period of reckonable qualifying service this amount will be proportionately reduced.


After 01.01.06 with the implementation of the order on “Improvement in the Pension of PBOR” the weightage in respect of Sepoy, Naik and Havildar has been raised to 10 years, 8 years and 6 years respectively (for all past and future retirees.) subject to a restriction of 30 years as maximum qualifying service. The benefit would be given only in respect of Service Pension.


The amount of pension finally arrived at will be subject to a minimum of Rs. 3500/- per month.

Authority : G.O.I. letter no 14(3)/2004-D(Pen/Sers)/Vol.III dated 01/02/2006 and 02/05/2006. The service pension in respect of PBOR for 33 years of qualifying service is calculated at 50% of the maximum of the scale of pay, including 50% of the highest classification allowance, if any, of the rank/pay group actually held continuously for 10 months (or maximum period of 10 months) before the date of discharge subject to minimum of Rs.1275/- p.m.(Rs.1913/- pm after merger of DP)



RULE OF 33 FOR FULL PENSION TO GO Shri MO Inasu, an Ex-Servicemen was re-employed in Central Govt Services in Kerala. He retired prior to Jan 2006. He challenged the rule of 33 years in CAT Ernakulam and pleaded that since this rule is NA for post-6 retirees as such as per judgment of hon’ble Supreme Court in Maj Gen SPS Vains Vs UOI, the same benefit should have been extended to pre-06 pensioners. CAT Ernakulam ruled that rule of 33 years pre–2006 being violative of Art 14 and 16 Constitution should be abrogated. After a long legal battle, finally in 2015 hon’ble Supreme Court upheld judgment of CAT Ernakulam. Therefore all Sepoys who serve upto 15 years (extended by two years), Naiks and Havildars who cannot serve for 33 years including rank weightage (Sepoy = 12 years; Naik = 10 years; Havildar = 8 years) and those officers / JCOs who take premature retirement would benefit substantially in pension. Ministry of Personnel, Pensions and Public Grievances is in the process of obtaining Govt sanction to remove this restriction of 33 years to all pre–06 retirees. Once that is received, then all Central Govt ministries will have to issue order to benefit their affected pensioners. The same has been covered in the SCOVA meeting held on 13 Oct 2015.

Payment of life-time arrears of pension (LTA)

LTA is the Pension for the period it was not drawn during the life time of a pensioner .According to Arrears of Pension (Nomination) Rules, 1983, pensioners are required to nominate another person, during his/her lifetime to receive the arrears of pension, due to the pensioner on his/her death. This is paid to the nominee, and if there is no nominee, lifetime arrears can be claimed by the legal heirs and settled. However, time barred claims will be settled by sanction of the concerned Pension Sanctioning Authority.

All pensioners & family pensioner are entitled to any increase in pension. they get arrears in due course. however if the pensioner/family pensioner passes away before receiving his/her arrears, these become "Life time Arrears (LTA)". Their arrears like Pension arrears of any category, the 7th CPC arrears or the OROP arrears which are entitled to them if not received during life time become LTA after death of the pensioner. Specially when a pensioner/family pensioner passes away before receipt of his/her pension arrears, the same can only be paid only to the nominee if so nominated during his/her life time by submitting Form "A" .

Bank will not automatically pass on such arrears due to veteran officer to the family pensioner unless she had been nominated as nominee in Form A duly submitted to the PDA. One copy of the same must be retained as an acknowledgement.

In case the PDA refuses to pay LTA to the heirs like son or daughter of the pensioner who unfortunately did not nominate a nominee for the LTA. The claimant has to approach First Class Judicial Magistrate and plead that out of ignorance her husband/father/mother did not sign Form "A" and he/she being the legally heir is entitled to receive the LTA. Based on ruling from 1st Class Judicial magistrate, the bank will release the LTA of their deceased parent. This is a tedious process and will take mush time as for any legal process.


What is LTA?

A1. The single lady gets her family pension when her pensioner husband passes away. But whatever dues he would have got had he was alive are not pension hence wife does not automatically becomes a beneficiary. The husband while in service is to nominate one of his NOK i.e. his wife or daughter or son to be the nominee to receive all his arrears like Pension arrears etc. For example if a person passes away on say 21 Dec 2015, his wife will get her family pension from 22 Dec 2015. But pension of her husband from 01 to 21 Dec is arrears which can only be claimed by nominee.


PENSION TABLES & ARREARS - JCOs & ORs - http://1drv.ms/1QwgWdQ OROP


Judicial commission -- http://1drv.ms/1NlcYkb

DEFENCE PENSION GUIDE PCDA (P)http://www.pcdapension.nic.in/dpti/DEFENCE%20PENSION%20GUIDE%202007_complete.pdf



Sunday, September 13, 2015 From Maj Navdeep Singh’s Blog

Irresponsible Chain Mails on pensions of Jawans and JCOs

Though the instant post was not ideally required, but I feel compelled to throw light on a subject, which, since the last few days has led to a massive disinformation campaign fuelled by irresponsible chain-mails regarding pensionary benefits of ranks other than Commissioned Officers.

As was brought out in the last post on this blog, the Government has issued the sanction order implementing the Supreme Court decision on removal of a pensionary anomaly with effect from 01 Jan 2006, that is, the date of implementation of the 6th Central Pay Commission (6th CPC) recommendations. There have been mails floating around and queries raised that the benefit as granted to Commissioned Officers and Civilians on 24 Sept 2012 has now been applied from 01 Jan 2006 but similar benefit has not been extended to ranks other than Commissioned Officers. Some mails have been nauseatingly abusive towards the Government and some have raised needless irresponsible conspiracy theories.

Let me attempt to clarify this issue for the benefit of readers.

When the 6th CPC recommendations were implemented, the pensions of pre-2006 retirees were fixed at 50% of the minimum of the applicable pay band with effect from 01 Jan 2006 rather than the pay within the pay band for each rank according to fitment tables. This was implemented for all Central Govt pensioners, irrespective of rank or service. This was objected to by pensioners and led to massive litigation since as per pensioners, the pensions were to be based on minimum of pay within the pay band for each rank/grade and not the minimum of the pay band itself.


While this controversy was simmering, the Government introduced a new system of pension calculation for ranks other than Commissioned Officers wherein they scrapped the system of minimum of the pay band but initiated a system of calculation by taking the maximum of the 5thCPC  scales fitted notionally into the new 6th CPC pay bands and alongwith enhanced weightages. This new system came into force on 01 July 2009. The weightages were further enhanced with effect from 24 Sept 2012. Hence, the controversy of minimum of pay band vis-a-vis minimum of pay for each rank/grade within the pay band became redundant for ranks other than Commissioned Officers with effect from 01 July 2009 but the said anomaly continued to hold field for Commissioned Officers and Civilians. Ranks other than Commissioned Officers who were now fixed on notional top of the 5th CPC scales w.e.f 01 June 2009 were however hit by the minimum of pay band vis-a-vis minimum of pay within the pay band anomaly from 01 Jan 2006 till 30 June 2009.

On the other hand, in the case of Commissioned Officers and Civilian retirees, the pension continued to be based on minimum of pay of the pay band itself and later the Government itself rectified the anomaly with effect from 24 Sept 2012 and provided that from Sept 2012 onwards the pension would be based on minimum of pay for each rank/grade within the pay band. The letter was issued in Jan 2013 with retrospective effect from Sept 2012. Various Tribunals and more importantly the Delhi High Court however ruled that the removal of the anomaly would have to be effectuated from 01 Jan 2006 rather than the future artificial cut-off date of 24 Sept 2012, and the said decision was ultimately affirmed by the Supreme Court.

In implementation of the decision of the Delhi High Court affirmed by the Supreme Court, the Government has issued the implementation instructions under question. For ranks other than Commissioned Officers, the instructions would apply from 01 Jan 2006 till 30 June 2009 since from 01 July 2009 onwards the anomaly stood removed and rendered redundant since all such personnel were as it is fixed on notional top of scales. For Commissioned Officers and Civilian pensioners, the instructions would apply from 01 Jan 2006 till 23 Sept 2012 since the anomaly was only removed on 23 Sept 2012.

Those who are cursing the Government and Commissioned Officers and Civilian pensioners must realize the contours of the controversy before jumping the gun based on half-baked information. It is for the information of all, that pre-2006 retiree ranks other than Commissioned Officers are granted pensions based on notional maximum while Commissioned Officers and Civilians are granted pensions based on notional minimum within the pay band. The Government letter rather protects the enhanced pensions of Jawans and JCOs from 01 July 2009/24 Sept 2012 and this should have brought joy to such pensioners, even if the arrears are not that massive, rather than disaffection.

Please do not go by chain-mails being circulated based on half baked information of self styled experts since reliance on such information leads to needless frustration based on non-existent controversies.

तालिका के स्तंभ 'डी' के तहत के रूप में खाया ये आगे सितम्बर 2012 को 24 से प्रभावी अधिकार प्राप्त समिति की रिपोर्ट पर refixed थे। पेंशन में अंतर भी 'एफ' कॉलम के तहत दिखाया गया है। इस वृद्धि के लिए अंतर का बकाया बैंकों द्वारा पेंशनरों को भुगतान किया गया। स्तंभ 'डी' के तहत के रूप में 24 सितंबर, 2012 पर तय रूप में पेंशन अब मूल पेंशन प्लस समय-समय पर लागू के रूप में महंगाई भत्ते की दरों में अंतर पर 1 जनवरी 2006 से प्रभावी देय हैं। सहित डीए तत्व गणना की कुल बकाया तालिका के स्तंभ 'जी' में दिए गए हैं। स्तंभ 'एच' परिवार पेंशनरों के लिए बकाया राशि देता है। नीचे दी गई तालिका Coloumn 'ए' के ​​तहत वर्ष में सेवा में डाल द्वारा अर्जित पूरी पेंशन के लिए आंकड़े देता है। दिखाया पेंशन आंकड़े रैंक वेटेज जोड़ा प्लस में डाल सेवा के लिए कर रहे हैं। मामले में किसी भी जूनियर कमीशन अफसर या या वह यहाँ पर क्लिक करके पहुँचा जा सकता है जो हमारे विस्तृत टेबल पर आंकड़ों की जांच कर सकते वर्षों में कम सेवा में डाल दिया है।



Wednesday, 16 December 2015

HONY CAPT BANA SINGH , PARAM VIR CHAKRA

THE HERO WHO WON A PARAM VIR CHAKRA ON SIACHEN

http://www.rediff.com/news/special/the-hero-who-won-a-param-vir-chakra-on-siachen/20160211.htm


Honorary Captain Bana Singh won the Param Vir Chakra, India's highest ranking gallantry award, for recapturing a Pakistani post on the Siachen Glacier.
Living a retired life in a quiet village in Jammu and Kashmir, he makes you feel that his act of phenomenal courage was part of a soldier's day at work.
Words: Archana Masih/Rediff.com. Images: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com





IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param Vir Chakra, outside his modest village home in Kadyal.
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
In a country which has only three living winners of the Param Vir Chakra, it is a rare honour to meet one.
"It is an honour to meet you, Sir," we say and Param Vir Chakra winner Honorary Captain Bana Singh replies, "What I did was my duty to the country. I was given a task and I did it."
There is no trace of arrogance that a decorated soldier would perhaps be fully entitled to -- he should after all be an icon of courage in a nation woefully short of heroes -- but Captain Bana Singh makes you feel that what he did was part of a soldier's day at work.
The difference being that when he set out for work that morning 29 years ago he was at the world's highest battlefield on the Siachen Glacier, leading an operation to recapture a Pakistani post at a height of 21,000 feet, scaling vertical walls of ice 1,500 feet high under blinding snowfall.
Pakistani troops sat on top of this brutal climb as Bana Singh and his men launched a brilliant attack, clearing the post of every Pakistani soldier, setting an example in high altitude warfare which would bring him the country's highest ranking gallantry award.
The man sitting in front of us in his modest village home flanked with green fields, dressed in a simple pyjama and light sweater, had not only defeated the enemy but nature itself on the most vicious battle terrain known to man, one that has taken the lives of countless Indian and Pakistani soldiers.
"'Three months in Siachen are like 30 years', a colonel once told me and asked, 'How did you do it?'" remembers Bana Singh who some years ago was invited to speak to young men in Siachen, soldiers not even born when he had won the Param Vir Chakra on that ruthless terrain.
Much has changed at the glacier since Bana Singh's time; men now have better gear, equipment and food, but Siachen continues to be an unimaginable challenge for military and human survival. A landscape where men guard the frontlines at temperatures below minus 52 degrees Celsius that saps the body of energy and hunger.
It was here that Naib Subedar Bana Singh fought the battle of his life.

IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param Vir Chakra, Bana Singh, 8 J&K Light Infantry, with then President K R Narayanan.
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
 The scale of his heroic accomplishment cannot be understood without the back story.
Pakistani soldiers were entrenched on the highest post in the Siachen Glacier, so important that it was named the Quaid Post, after the founder of Pakistan, Mohammad Ali Jinnah.
From here the Pakistanis had a vantage point, with a clear view of Indian posts that were supplied only by helicopters. By controlling that post Pakistani soldiers targeted the Indian supply lines on the Soltoro range.
India had failed to recapture the post in two previous attempts; a reconnaissance patrol under young Lieutenant Rajiv Pande was gunned down by the Pakistanis, leaving only three survivors.
In a do or die attempt, then Subedar Bana Singh and 6 men were tasked to recapture the post once again on June 26, 1987. If the mission had to succeed it had to be completed before sunset that day -- and by 5 o'clock that evening, the Indian flag was flying at the top.
,font size=7>India had won back the Quaid Post in a battle so heroic that the post was renamed Bana Post, by which it is known till today.
'There was a single bunker on the top. I threw a grenade inside and closed the door. At the end, a total of six Pakistanis were killed,' he had told Rediff.com contributor Claude Arpi in 2007.
Claude's wife Abha Tiwari's maternal uncle, Major Somnath Sharma, incidentally won the first Param Vir Chakra. Major Sharma died fighting Pakistani intruders in Badgam in the Kashmir valley in November 1947.
Major Sharma's last words, inscribed below his bust in Palampur, Himachal Pradesh, were: 'The enemy is only 50 yards from us. We are heavily outnumbered...I shall not withdraw an inch but will fight to the last man and last round.'

IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param Vir Chakra, Bana Singh, 8 J&K Light Infantry, with then prime minister Rajiv Gandhi.
Photograph: Kind Courtesy, Captain Bana Singh
 Captain Bana Singh is the only soldier along with the late Major Ramaswamy Parmeswaram, to be awarded the Param Vir Chakra in peacetime, an award which is otherwise only given for exemplary military courage during war.
Major Parmeswaram, 41, was martyred during the Indian Peace Keeping Operation in Sri Lanka in 1987, five months after Bana Singh's heroism in Siachen.
The last time the Param Vir Chakra was awarded was in the Kargil war in July 1999; at that time Bana Singh was the only serving Param Vir Chakra winner in the Indian Army.
Looking back at the Kargil conflict in which India lost 527 soldiers, he feels that that war changed many things for the armed forces and compliments then prime minister Atal Bihari Vajpayee and then defence minister George Fernandes.
"It was only in Vajpayeeji's time that we acquired the facilities of proper transportation of the bodies of fallen soldiers home," he says, surrounded in his home by India war memorabilia like the historic surrender of the Pakistani forces in Dhaka after the 1971 war and photographs of two famous Indian generals -- Field Marshals K M Cariappa and S H F J 'Sam' Manekshaw.
"The Kargil war highlighted the entire fauj. The media also played a role and as a result martyrs' families are looked after much better than before."
A year after Kargil, he retired after 32 years of service to the nation and went home to his village of Kadyal near Jammu where he was born. His son Rajinder Singh now serves the Indian Army.
For a decade after his retirement, apart from his pension from the Indian Army, Captain Bana Singh would receive Rs 160 as pension from the Jammu and Kashmir government. A sorry comment on that state's regard for the only Param Vir Chakra from Jammu and Kashmir.
It was only after a long and sustained effort that the Jammu and Kashmir pension was raised to Rs 10,400 in 2010. His pension from the army is Rs 32,000 per month.
"People say I have set an example and I say I don't know how I did it, but I am proud to have successfully fulfilled the task my unit gave me," says Captain Bana Singh in his small drawing room festooned with army felicitations.
"I have received a lot of respect and fame from my country. It is a blessing."
Every year, Bana Singh is invited by the government to be part of the Republic Day parade, in the small contingent of soldiers awarded the highest gallantry award.
It is a day when the soldier, who retired from the Indian Army in 2000, wears his full uniform, puts his Param Vir Chakra medal and salutes the President on Rajpath in the country's grandest parade.
In all these years, he has missed just two parades, he says and tells us a story reminiscent of days past when some men lived their whole lives on words like honour, duty and discipline.

IMAGE: Honorary Captain Bana Singh, Param Vir Chakra, outside his modest village home in Kadyal.
Photograph: Rajesh Karkera/Rediff.com
 Sitting on a small water tank in a field behind his house, Captain Bana Singh speaks of one such incident when a few years after his retirement, a retired senior army officer whom he had served under stopped by at his home.
"He looked at me and asked 'Bana, do you remember me?' and I said 'Sir, if an Indian soldier cannot recognise an officer who has commanded him, he has no right to this country'."
In a nation overdone with places named after politicians, the long overdue Bana Singh stadium in his native tehsil may yet not be fully functional -- but Captain Bana Singh Param Vir Chakra is not one to get perturbed about any such lack of recognition.
That afternoon when we had came looking for his home, we only had to ask for his name and people would lead the way.
Later, as he bade us good bye, the postman dropped by with an envelope, bearing only his name and the village name as the address.
"Someone is inviting me to speak to their students and inspire them. I travel at least ten times a year for interactions in schools and colleges," he smiles, folding the letter neatly, overwhelmed with the respect he has got from people over the years.
On his school visits, children want to know how he won that battle in Siachen for India; how he conquered fear. At other functions, people touch his feet in respect of his valour.
The recognition is unbridled and comes to him spontaneously. No officially named plaque, road, bridge or stadium can rival that.


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