புதன், 24 பிப்ரவரி, 2016

7 th CPC Reports Step by Step

7th CPC Recommendations on Minimum Pay Calculation – Reports Step by Step

The Commission has estimated the minimum pay (the calculations for which have been tabulated in the Annexure) through the following steps:
Step 1 : The food, clothing and detergent products listed and their respective quantities specified by the 15th ILC have been adopted. These quantities indicate the monthly consumption of the listed products by a family comprising three consumption units. [For e.g. for the product ‘Dal’ the quantity specified for daily consumption is 80 grams per consumption unit per day. The monthly consumption of Dal by a consumption unit thus works out to 2.4 kg (80 x 30). Accordingly the monthly consumption of Dal by a family comprising 3 units is 7.2 kgs (2.4 x 3).]

Step 2 : The quantities have been multiplied by their respective product prices to arrive at product wise cost. The price adopted for each product is the average of prices of various items that are included in the product. The price of an item is the average of its prices prevailing in each month from July, 2014-June, 2015. [At monthly family consumption of 7.2 kg the Commission has estimated the monthly expenditure on Dal at ₹704.44 after calculating the price of Dal at ₹97.84 per kg. The price of Dal has been calculated as the average of prices of Toor, Urad and Moong Dal items specified under the product Dal and whose prices have been determined at ₹87.86, ₹109.66 and ₹96.00 respectively. The prices of these three Dal items are the twelve monthly average prices for the period July, 2014–June, 2015.] The prices of all items have been sourced from Labor Bureau, Shimla. These prices are used in the calculation of the CPI (IW) and subsequently the calculation of Dearness Allowance. In the current exercise the prices of all items are for the period July 2014-June 2015 and have been used in the calculation of DA at 119 percent operative from 01.07.2015.
Step 3 : The cost of food, clothing and detergent products obtained from Step 2 has been divided by 0.8 to arrive at a total, of which 20 percent provides for fuel and lighting expenses. This addresses the fifth component under para 4.2.3. The fourth component on housing under para 4.2.3 has not been addressed at this stage as its quantification at the final stage of pay estimation is considered more appropriate by the Commission.
Step 4 : The cost estimated from Step 3 is divided by 0.85 to arrive at a total, of which 15 percent is towards recreation, ceremonies and festivities. The prescribed provision of 25 percent to cover education, recreation, ceremonies, festivals and medical expenses has been moderated to 15 percent because expenses on educational and medical necessities are being separately provided for through relevant allowances and facilities and thus need not be provided here. This partially addresses the first of the two components outside the 15th ILC norms.
Step 5 : The cost estimated from Step 4 is increased by 25 percent to account for the skill factor, following the reasoning that there is no unskilled staff in the government after the merger of Group D staff in Group `C’. This addresses the second of the two components outside the 15th ILC norms.
Step 6 : The cost estimated from Step 5 is divided by 0.97 to arrive at a total, of which 3 percent provides for housing expenses. This is done in view of the observation that license fees for government accommodation is about 3 percent of the total pay. This addresses the fourth component stated under para 3 but partially so, as the 15th ILC norms had fixed the housing provision at 7.5 percent.
Step 7 : The cost estimated from Step 6 is as on 1 July, 2015 when the DA was 119 percent. The DA is assumed to be 125 percent as on 1 January, 2016, the day from which the Commission expects its recommendations to be implemented by the government. Accordingly the cost estimated from Step 6 has been increased by 3 percent (2.25/2.19 = 1.027 or nearly 3%).
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Defense News-- Budget

Parrikar reviewed the overall status of defence acquisition (supply order or contract signed) over the last two years involving Rs 1.5 lakh crore
NEW DELHI: Ahead of the Budget, Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar today directed his officials to make concerted efforts to get cleared 86 acquisition proposals involving Rs 1.5 lakh crore within the first quarter of the next financial year.

Parrikar also sought a review of proposed capital acquisition and budgetary requirements for the next decade, which he said would be an ongoing exercise.

Parrikar reviewed the overall status of defence acquisition (supply order or contract signed) over the last two years involving Rs 1.5 lakh crore.

He also took stock of the long pending short range surface to air missile system (SRSAM) project for the Navy, for which the DRDO had initiated talks with French firm MBDA last year.

The review of the projects was done at a meeting of the Defence Acquisition Council (DAC) chaired by Parrikar in the South Block.

"The DAC focused primarily on review of overall status of defence acquisition over last two years," sources in the Defence Ministry said.

They said a total of 81 capital acquisition schemes have matured since June 2014 and a letter of intent for construction of nine Mine Counter-Measure Vehicles have been given to Goa Shipyard on a nomination basis.

"The cleared proposals thus amount to Rs 1.5 lakh crore. While 81 schemes have fully matured during this period, 66 procurement schemes worth nearly Rs 2 lakh crore have been accorded Acceptance of Necessity," the sources said.

They added that Parrikar took note of the fact despite concerted efforts to expedite procurement, there still remained 314 cases which have not yet fructified.

Out of these, 86 schemes, approximately worth Rs 1.5 lakh crore are close to final stages of approval.

"The Minister has directed that all concerned should make concerted efforts to get these cases cleared in the next 4-5 months, which means within the first quarter of the next financial year," sources said.

In addition, he advised the Services to review their pending acquisition proposals which have not fructified for a long time for their "contemporary relevance".

Parrikar also sought a review of proposed capital acquisition proposals for the next 10 years.

The Minister said this would be an ongoing exercise to refine and further mature long term projections.

The DAC also accorded approval of procurement for 619 high mobility vehicles under by option clause from TATA worth Rs 457 crore.

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