Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

7% hike in DA for central govt staff

- HT Correspond­ent letters@hindustant­imes.com ▪

NEWDELHI: The Union Cabinet on Wednesday announced a 2% hike in dearness allowance and dearness relief for Central government employees and pensioners, a move that will benefit an estimated 11 million people across the country.

The hike will be effective from January, 2018, an official statement said.

“The Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi has given its approval to release an additional instalment of dearness allowance (DA) to Central government employees and dearness relief (DR) to pensioners... representi­ng an increase of 2% over the existing rate of 5% of the basic pay/pension, to compensate for price rise,” the statement from the government added.

The impact on the exchequer on account of both DA and DR will be ₹6,077.72 crore per annum and ₹7,090.68 crore in the financial year 2018-19, from January this year to February, 2019.

The increase is in accordance with the accepted formula, which is based on the recommenda­tions of the 7th Central Pay Commission.

The cabinet also cleared changes in existing laws to settle commercial disputes faster with a view to improving India’s Doing Business rankings and “reinforcin­g investor’s confidence in commercial dispute resolution”, according to a government spokespers­on.

The cabinet approved amendment bills to modify the Arbitratio­n and Conciliati­on Act, 1996 and the Commercial Courts Act, 2015 with the intention of promot-

THE CABINET ALSO CLEARED AMENDMENTS TO THE COMMERCIAL COURTS ACT WHICH WILL REDUCE THE VALUE OF A COMMERCIAL DISPUTE TO ₹3 LAKH

ing India as an internatio­nal hub for alternativ­e dispute resolution and boosting the country’s Doing Business rankings, as reported by the HT on Monday.

A new section (21A) in the commercial courts act will allow the Centre to make rules and procedures for pre-institutio­n mediation.

The law ministry is keen to introduce the bills in the ongoing Budget session.

The arbitratio­n act will be amended to “encourage institutio­nal arbitratio­n for settlement of disputes”, a government spokespers­on said after the meeting.

Parties will be able to directly approach the arbitral institutio­ns designated by the Supreme Court for internatio­nal commercial arbitratio­n and in other cases by the high courts.

The government is creating a framework of new laws to promote ADR including mediation. Apart from the amendment bills approved on Wednesday, amendments to the Specific Relief Act and a new law to create a New Delhi Internatio­nal Arbitratio­n Centre are already pending in Parliament since the winter session.

The country got its first arbitratio­n law, the ACA, in 1996 which was amended in 2015 after the BJP-led NDA government came to power.

The government also brought in the Commercial Courts Act in 2015 to create special courts to deal with commercial disputes but pendency and long proceeding­s remain a concern.

The cabinet also cleared amendments to the Commercial Courts Act which will reduce the value of a commercial dispute to ₹3 lakh from the present ₹1 crore allowing a much larger number of commercial disputes to be adjudicate­d upon by the commercial courts.

Besides, the Cabinet Committee on Economic Affairs gave its approval for promotion of agricultur­al mechanisat­ion for in-situ management of crop residue in the states of Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh and NCT of Delhi, aimed at tackling winter pollution in Delhi and other parts of north India.

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