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8th CPC - A Chance to Reform Pay Commissions

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June 13, 2026

Mains: GS-III – Economy

Why in News?

As India moves toward the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC) should focus less on salary hikes and more on creating a transparent, equitable, and fiscally sustainable compensation framework across India’s public services.

What about the Pay Commission?

  • Pay Commission – It is the temporary body, which constituted periodically for every 10 years by the Central Government.
  • Purpose – To examine and recommend changes into various issues of emoluments structure, retirement benefits and other service conditions of Central Government employees.
  • Under the – Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance.
  • Historical Context – Since 1947, the Indian government has established 7 Pay Commissions. 
  • Composition
    • 1 Chairperson;
    • 1 Part-time Member &
    • 1 Member Secretary.
  • Tenure – It will make its recommendations within 18 months of the date of its constitution.
  • Key aspects to be considered –
  • Economic conditions in the country and the need for fiscal prudence.
  • Need to ensure that adequate resources are available for developmental expenditure and welfare measures.
  • Unfunded cost of non-contributory pension schemes.
  • The likely impact of the recommendations on the finances of the State Governments which usually adopt the recommendations with some modifications; and
  • The prevailing emolument structure, benefits and working conditions available to employees of Central Public Sector Undertakings and private sector.
  • 8th Central Pay Commission – It was formally constituted  on 3 November 2025.
    • Headed by – Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai, a former Supreme Court judge & chairperson of the Press Council of India.
    • Member (Part-Time) – Pulak Ghosh, Professor IIM Bangalore
    • Member-Secretary –Pankaj Jain, Petroleum Secretary.

What are the challenges in the current system?

  • Focus vs Reality – As India prepares for the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC), public discussion has largely centred on familiar themes — fitment factors, salary revisions and arrears.
  • The real issue is not just how much pay should rise, but whether the system for deciding public compensation is fair, consistent, and financially sustainable. 
  • More Than Administration – This is more than a technical exercise; the way the government structures salaries, allowances and pensions reflect broader institutional priorities and influences public confidence in governance.
  • PC’s Influence – Over the decades, Pay Commissions (PC) have become far more than wage-revision exercises.
  • Their recommendations shape inter-service parity, long-term fiscal commitments, and institutional balance within the state.
  • Narrow Process, Big Impact – Yet, the process remains narrow, with a small, time-bound body tasked with evaluating a diverse ecosystem of civil, military and technical services, largely based on representations from the services themselves.  
  • Absence of Uniform Evaluative Framework – Different services have unique structures, career paths, and working conditions.
  • But there is no universally accepted method for comparing risk, responsibility, technical complexity, or career progression.
  • Parity Without Principles – Officers across services with very different career paths and responsibilities may, at certain stages, receive comparable compensation.
  • The issue is not one of competition between services but institutional coherence.
  • The comparison between civilian services and the armed forces illustrates this complexity.
  • Civilian vs. Military Careers – Military careers are shorter & pyramidal structure, with limited promotional opportunities and earlier retirement.
  • Civilian services generally offer broader avenues for advancement and longer careers.
  • Aligning compensation across such different systems requires careful consideration of these structural differences.
  • Reduction in Experience – In recent years, the experience required for senior administrative positions is reduced.
  • While faster career progression may reflect changing governance needs, complex policy challenges still demand institutional memory and seasoned judgment.
  • Efficiency alone cannot replace experience.
  • Issues With Allowances – Allowances are meant to compensate for hardship, remoteness or operational risk, but there is no uniform and transparent framework for assessing such conditions across services.
  • This can create disparities that are difficult to justify and may foster perceptions of inconsistency.
  • Non-Functional Upgradation (NFU) – Allows financial growth without a corresponding increase in responsibility; it weakens the link between role, accountability and compensation.
  • Though introduced to address slower promotion avenues, the NFU continues to generate debate over equity and institutional rationale.
  • Issues with Pensions – India currently operates multiple pension systems, including legacy defined-benefit schemes, contributory plans for newer entrants, and separate arrangements for elected representatives.
  • Fiscal Burden – According to the RBI’s State Finances Report (2023), salaries, pensions and interest payments consume a large share of State expenditure, limiting fiscal space for development.  
  • This raises concerns about sustainability and fairness across generations.
  • Fragmented Pay Frameworks – At present, pay frameworks for the executive, legislature and judiciary evolve through different processes. 
  • While constitutionally distinct, this fragmentation can create inconsistencies and reduce transparency in compensation decisions.
  • Loss of Public Trust – Public trust depends not only on fairness, but also on transparency and explainability.

What are the key suggestions proposed?

  • Global Shift in Pay Reviews – Many countries have gradually moved towards continuous and institutionalised mechanisms for reviewing public sector compensation.
  • Independent bodies, clear benchmarks, and regular reviews have replaced India’s once-in-a-decade Pay Commission model.
  • Need for a Durable Framework – India may benefit from a National Compensation Authority or a specialised public service body, could bring greater consistency to public sector pay. 
  • This would not centralise power but instead set common principles for evaluating responsibility, experience, and hardship, while preserving flexibility for different services and States.
  • Respecting Federal Structure – Any reform must respect India’s federal structure.
  • States should retain autonomy over implementation while operating within a broader framework of transparency, comparability, and fiscal discipline.
  • Building Coherence – Greater coherence across branches of government, without affecting constitutional independence, would strengthen both credibility and public confidence.
  • Beyond Salaries & Pensions – Public compensation is not simply about salaries and pensions, but part of the state–citizen relationship.
  • In a democracy, compensation systems must be both financially sustainable and publicly explainable.
  • Need for Transparency – If parity is to be maintained, the principles governing the Pay Commission must be transparent, consistent, and objectively justified. 

What lies ahead?

  • The 8th Pay Commission presents an opportunity to move beyond periodic revision and engage with these deeper structural questions.
  • Whether that opportunity is utilised meaningfully may shape public trust in institutional governance for years to come.

Reference

The Hindu | The 8th CPC — a chance to reform pay commissions

 

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