Friday, March 27, 2015

O.R.O.P. : HAS SOLDIER'S PENSION BILL BECOME UNAFFORDABLE?

SOURCE:
FROM E-MAIL CIRCULATION





Per Capita Soldiers in India
Has their pension bill become unaffordable?
 
By
 
Maj Gen Surjit Singh
 
 
 
The lead story in a national daily has made a fervent plea for a debate on military pensions. The plethora of figures given in the editorial published in the Indian Express on 09 March 2015 has obviously been ‘planted’ by someone in the ministry, since they are not available in the public domain. The subject must indeed be discussed, since it affects a large section of people, but the statistics must be seen holistically and viewed in the right perspective.
 
 
As per the Internet, the population of our country in March 2015 has been estimated at 1278 million. The total number of soldiers, sailors and airmen on active list is reported to be 1.3 million. These two figures reveal that the number of combatant personnel for every 10,000 Indians is 10.17.
 
 This ratio is a lot higher, in other countries.
 
The figures are: India 10.17; Pakistan 37.1; USA 47; Russia 59; China 17; Sri Lanka 75; Iran 65 and Israel lead the pack with a figure of 214! These statistics reveal that a tax payer in our country has to support the least number of soldiers.
 
 
Let us now compare this proportion with the situation as it
 
obtained in our own country 35 years ago. Our armed forces
 
were comprehensively re-structured and expanded after the
 
1962 debacle, but their strength leveled off at a figure of
 
around 1.25 million by 1981. Our population at that time was
 
683 million. The resultant per capita ratio works out to 18.3
 
military personnel for every Indian.
 
Thus, in the last three decades, the number of soldiers for every
 
10,000 Indians has dropped to 55% of this figure..
 
 
 
For those who have an aversion to statistics let
 
us put it in words.  Our country has a very large
 
population. But the size of our military is not as
 
big. Therefore, our people have to pay less to pay
 
the soldiers. Further, during the last forty years,
 
the population has more than doubled. But the
 
size of the military has not been increased.
 
Consequently, our defence spending on a pro-
 
rata basis has been reducing slowly, but surely.  
 
 
 
The ratio of pensioners to serving personnel in India is, indeed, a matter of great concern. This truth had been comprehended as early as 1983, and a series of studies were ordered by the Army Headquarters to arrest the trend. To maintain a youthful age profile, combat soldiers have to be retired in the prime of their lives, and that bloats up the number of pensioners. The service headquarters have written innumerable papers on this subject. In fact if all the files that were created on this issue had not been destroyed,
 there would be no place left for anyone to sit in concerned sections of the Ministry of Defence.
 
 
Almost all the thinkers came to the conclusion that the only solution to this problem was lateral shift of soldiers to police and Para-military forces. Unfortunately, this impinges on the cadre structure and promotion prospects of the worthy officers currently heading these forces. Consequently, all these meticulously conducted studies were first shelved and later consigned to flames. The incinerators in South Block are so effective that even the ashes are destroyed, so that posterity does not get a wind of these prickly suggestions. The military top brass are not alone in suggesting lateral absorption of soldiers into other departments of the government. Successive Pay Commissions have recommended that ex-servicemen be absorbed into police and Para-military forces. My friend, J Thomas feels that ex-servicemen be given the necessary skills for them to be laterally shifted to Defence establishments like the DGOF, MES, and defence PSUs.
 (RATHER) As a rule, five years military service should be a pre-requisite for a job in all Defence Establishments.
 
 
 
 The Sixth Central Pay Commission devoted a full
 
chapter (Number 2.4 of their Report) in which they gave details
 
of how lateral absorption should be carried out. Towards this
 
end they even went to the extent of abolishing the pay group
 
structure of the armed forces, so that lateral shift would not
 
lead to a loss of pay. During implementation of the report of the
 
6th CPC, the government is believed to have stated that
 
 ‘this issue will be examined at a later date’.  And of course, that
 
 
 
 
 
‘later date’ never came, and as of now, the problem continues to
 
 
 
 
stare at us, and show its ugly face whenever we look at the
 
pension bill.



(LOSS OF JOB MEANS)
 
 
Let me mention here that the loss of job in the prime of life

leads to loss of earning potential. In addition, it results in a

person denied the opportunity to work, and therefore feel

‘needed’. Even the family does not value a man who is idle, and

seen hanging around the house all day long. There is no

punishment greater than being unemployed, with no skill to

sell! The pension is small consolation and a poor substitute for

work. 
 
 
 
We now turn to another issue which is related with this subject.

Between 1991 and now, a great deal has happened to our

economy. When we were children, food was the main concern.

The Second Pay Commission (1957-59) devoted a considerable

part of their report in devising a ‘need based’ pay as the

minimum wage to ensure that the humblest paid government

servant could afford to provide 2700 calories of food

recommended by Dr Aykroyd to his family of three. This factor

became the corner stone of their report. 
 
 
The economic situation has undergone a sea change since then. Our GDP has been rising at healthy pace especially after 1991, and goods and services which were the exclusive preserve of the rich and the mighty are now in the reach of even the lower middle class in India. Merely thirty odd years ago, a residential telephone was a luxury. In the army only officers above the rank of Colonel were entitled to a phone in their residence, and that too, without the ‘trunk dialling’ facility. Today, even an unskilled daily wage earner owns a mobile phone. 
 
                                                 


The improvement in the quality and supply of these creature

comforts by way of ‘white goods’ is similar. The soldier is an

integral part of the society. Therefore, if a neighbour has fancy

smart phone, and our man cannot afford it for his child, he

feels belittled. There is enough evidence to suggest that the size

of the national cake has increased. The basket of goods and

services which constitute the shopping list of the householder

has undergone a sea change. The compensation package has to

cater for this fact of life. Or, as my friend K Aggarwal puts it,


‘If the size of the national cake has increased,

then the soldier and also the veterans are

justified in seeking a larger slice. In all

fairness, this should not be denied to them’

 
 
 
Philosophically, I observe that life was a lot simpler when we

were children. Our needs were limited to ‘roti, kapda aur

makaan’. Today, if a person does not have a cell phone for a few

hours, he might die of asphyxiation!
 
 
 
To sum up, let me state with full conviction that compared to

other countries, our per capita soldiers are much less in

number. To help them give of their best, it is our bounden duty

to provide them the means to buy all that they need to live with

grace and dignity. There is a crying need to review the terms of

engagement of the soldiers to bring the number of pensioners

down. I am convinced that it is possible to do so, if the

government has the will. The ground work for this has already

been done by the 6th Pay Commission. The MHA and the MoD

have to shed some of their unfounded reservations to

implement this highly overdue reform.
 
 
Maj Gen Surjit Singh.  e-mail surjit97eme@gmail.com
*


 
 
An Addendum

 
 
I was about to send this piece out when I discovered some interesting facts. I found that soon after our independence, defence received a much larger share of the national budget than now. In Feb 1951, Shri CD Deshmukh presented a budget in which the total expenditure was estimated at Rs 375.43 crores, of which defence was allocated 180.2 crores. This works out to about 48% of the government spending.

 
This year, in 2015 Shri Arun Jaitley has granted 2,46,727 crores to defence out of the total expenditure of Rs 17,77,477 crores. That is 13.8% of the total outflow. Therefore, those who believe that defence was neglected during the early days of our republic are mistaken.


Defence is, in fact, receiving a raw deal now!
 
 
From these statistics, I also derived some more inferences. Assuming that the budgetary figures have a direct relationship with the GDP, it can be seen that during the last 64 years, our national income has increased by a factor of about 4740 times. Now, since prices of essential items such as food grains, sugar, milk, cloth and building materials have risen by a factor of 100 during this period, the actual increase in the size of the national cake at fixed prices is of the order of 47.4. Since the population of the country has gone up from 36 crores in 1951 to 127 crores now, it is evident that the average Indian today has at least 13.4 times more money to spend than his grandfather, six decades ago. And this fact does not really need all this statistical analysis. Just take a good look at all the vehicles you see on the road and then go into a shopping mall. Compare the goods and services you see there and then recall what we possessed when we were children.
 
 
Now, take a look at the defence budget. View it in the light of the revenue of some of our major corporate houses. You will find that the annual turnover of several companies exceeds our defence spending. If you add the net worth of just two Indians, Mukesh Ambani and Azim Premji, you will discover that it exceeds the budget of our army, navy and the airforce! I am sanguine that our men in uniform will discharge their duties with utmost commitment, always and every time.

Surjit 

































1 comment:

  1. A pain taking, hard and meticulous work by General Surjit.

    ReplyDelete