Hindustan Times (East UP)

Army may raise retirement age, slash pensions of force

- Rahul Singh letters@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: The department of military affairs (DMA) headed by the chief of defence staff has proposed to increase the retirement age of officers by one to three years along with a service extension of up to 17 years for the nonofficer cadre from select branches, and is also considerin­g a plan to cut pensions of officers opting for premature release from service in an attempt to retain skilled manpower, according to an official communicat­ion reviewed by HT.

The increased retirement age of officers will allow colonels, brigadiers and major generals to serve longer, with jawans and junior commission­ed officers from some non-combat branches also getting service extension that will see them retire at the age of 57 instead of around 40 to 52. The proposed cuts in pensions range from 25% to 50% depending on an officer’s length of service at the time of leaving the job.

While the proposal for service extension has been hailed in military circles as a welcome step, the plan to review pensions has invited criticism from many in the serving and retired community. The letter has proposed that colonels would serve till the age of 57 (instead of the current 54), brigadiers up to 58 (up from 56) and major generals till 59. No change has been proposed in the retirement age of lieutenant generals --- it stays at 60. This applies to equivalent ranks in the air force and the navy.

THE PROPOSED PENSION CUTS RANGE FROM 25% TO 50% OF THE ENTITLED PENSION DEPENDING ON AN OFFICER’S LENGTH OF SERVICE AT THE TIME OF LEAVING THE JOB

The department of military affairs (DMA) headed by the chief of defence staff has proposed to increase the retirement age of officers by one to three years along with a service extension of up to 17 years for the non-officer cadre from select branches, and is also considerin­g a plan to cut pensions of officers opting for premature release from service in an attempt to retain skilled manpower, according to an official communicat­ion reviewed by HT.

The raised retirement age of officers will allow colonels, brigadiers and major generals to serve longer, with jawans and junior commission­ed officers from some non-combat branches also getting service extension that will see them retire at the age of 57 instead of around 40 to 52. The proposed pension cuts range from 25% to 50% of the entitled pension depending on an officer’s length of service at the time of leaving the job. While the proposal for service extension has been hailed in military circles as a welcome step, the plan to review pensions has invited criticism from many in the serving and retired community.

The letter, dated October 29, has proposed that colonels would serve till the age of 57 (instead the current 54), brigadiers up to 58 (up from 56) and major generals till 59 as against the current 58. No change has been proposed in the retirement age of lieutenant generals --- it stays at 60. This applies to equivalent ranks in the air force and the navy. Junior commission­ed officers and other ranks from logistics, technical and medical branches will retire at the age of 57 instead of 40 to 52 (depending on the rank).

The proposed pension review is the most significan­t move under considerat­ion, officials familiar with developmen­ts said. Officers who seek premature release after 20-25 years of service will get only 50% of the entitled pension, those leaving after 26 to 30 years will get 60% and officers quitting after 31 to 35 years of service will draw 75% of the entitled pension, the letter says. Only those with 35-plus years of service will get full pension.

The letter states there are several specialist­s/super specialist­s who are trained for highly skilled jobs in the services but quit to work in other sectors. “Such loss of high skilled manpower results in void in the services skill matrix and is counterpro­ductive to the armed forces. In view of this, it has been decided to review the pension entitlemen­ts,” the letter adds.

The communicat­ion has set November 10 as the deadline for preparing a draft government sanction letter on increasing retirement age and reviewing pensions for perusal by CDS General Bipin Rawat.

Extension of service is a good step, both for the organisati­on in retaining quality and trained manpower as also in congruence with individual aspiration­s, said military affairs expert Lieutenant General Vinod Bhatia (retd).

“The pension slabs could be an incentive for deadwood to continue which is neither good for the organisati­on nor does it optimise financial resources,” said Bhatia.

The DMA’s proposals will benefit the organisati­on and meet individual aspiration­s, said military officials asking not to be identified.

On the proposal regarding service extension for the non-officer cadre from non-combat arms, the officials said the military invests on training technician­s but they come up for retirement when their profession­al skill is at its peak.

On the cut in pensions, the officials said, “Individual­s who complete their pensionabl­e age as per terms of engagement are not affected.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India