Latest news with #6thCPC


Mint
13-06-2025
- Business
- Mint
8th Pay Commission: What to expect? Will salary hike miss January 2026 timeline? What we know about Pay Band this time
8th Pay Commission News: Around 1 crore central government employees and pensioners are eagerly waiting for the Terms of Reference (ToR) for the 8th Pay Commission, which will serve as the basis for the revisions of salaries and pensions among other things. The 8th Pay Commission, which is expected to be set up soon, will revise the salaries, pensions and allowances of government employees and pensioners. But when will the 8th Pay Commission be set up? Will there be delays? How will a delay affect fitment factor? Read on to know the answers. As per a report by The Economic Times, the 8th Pay Commission may be delayed beyond the expected timeline of January 2026. The 7th Pay Commission, which was announced in February 2014, came into effect almost two years later in January 2016. That timeline was given to accommodate the time required for submission of reports, approval from the cabinet and subsequent rollout. However, as of mid-2025, there is no report of the 8th Pay Commission being formed, and the ToRs have not been finalised either. While there are reports of discussions about the commission being underway, the rollout of the 8th Pay Commission may miss the January 2026 timeline. According to the ET report, the implementation may only be done in late 2026 or early 2027. Over the three decades of pay commissions, the government has experimented with its structure – Grade Pay, Pay Bands, and the Pay Matrix. Each of them have set a norm for how salaries have been revised through the decades. Before 6th CPC, there were over 4,000 disparate pay scales across roles, which complicated salary calculations. The 6th Pay Commission introduced Pay Bands and Grade Pay, simplifying the payment process for each role. The 7th CPC brought the real gamechanger – the Pay Matrix. The commission created a 24-level Pay Matrix, with each cell representing unique salaries. Under the 7th CPC, the fitment factor was revised at 2.57. While there have been no word on how the 8th Pay Commission will revise salary structures of lakhs of central government employees and pensioners, experts have said that the fitment factor will be kept between 2.5 to 2.8. However, since there is no clarity on even the formation of the commission, nothing can be confirmed as of now.


News18
11-06-2025
- Business
- News18
8th Pay Commission: Grade Pay Vs Pay Bands Vs Pay Matrix, What Are These? How Fitment Factor Changed Under Them
Last Updated: The 8th Pay Commission will revise salaries, pensions, and allowances, directly benefiting over 50 lakh central government employees and over 65 lakh pensioners. As discussions grow louder about the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC), over one crore central government employees and pensioners face a familiar question: How will my basic pay be reshuffled this time? The answer might lie in three decades of structural experiments – Grade Pay, Pay Bands, and the Pay Matrix – each revolutionising how the central government calculates salaries. Here's what are these, and why the fitment factor is important. The 8th Pay Commission will revise salaries, pensions, and allowances, directly benefiting over 50 lakh central government employees and over 65 lakh pensioners. The Three Eras of Salary Calculation Pre-6th CPC Era: Chaos Before the 6th Pay Commission in 2006, a large number of pay scales existed with no standardisation. Fitment factor was also non-existent. Before the 5th CPC, salary revisions relied on individual pay scale adjustments and merger of DA rather than a uniform multiplier. The fitment factor was introduced under the 5th Pay Commission. The Grade Pay Revolution (6th CPC, 2006) Pre-2006, India had over 4,000 disparate pay scales across roles. An undersecretary earned Rs 10,000, while a section officer made Rs 12,000 – with no logic linking hierarchies. The 6th CPC collapsed scales into 4 Pay Bands (e.g., PB-1: Rs 5,200–20,200) + Grade Pay (GP). GP determined seniority within bands (e.g., Rs 2,400 for clerk, Rs 4,800 for under secretary). A uniform 1.86x multiplier on 'Basic Pay + DA" placed employees in new bands. For example, Old Salary: Rs 50,000 (Rs 45,000 Basic + Rs 5,000 DA) → Revised: Rs 50,000 × 1.86 = Rs 93,000 (placed in PB-3 + GP Rs 6,600). Pay Bands + GP created anomalies. Senior promotions often landed employees below juniors due to overlapping bands. The pay bands were abolished. The 7th Pay Commission created a 24-level Pay Matrix where each cell represented a unique salary (e.g., Level 10: Rs 56,100–Rs 1,77,500). Vertical movement would include promotion, while horizontal movement would comprise annual increments. Under the 7th CPC, the government announced a fitment factor of 2.57x on 'Basic Pay + Grade Pay'. For example, pre-revised salary of Rs 25,400 (Rs 20,000 basic pay and Rs 5,400 grade pay) was revised to Rs 65,278 (Level 6) (Rs 25,400 × 2.57). Fitment Factors Under 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th CPCs 5th CPC (1997): First formal fitment (1.38x) but applied only after merging full DA with basic pay. 6th CPC (2006): Fitment factor was fixed at 1.86x. 7th CPC (2016): 2.57x aimed to offset inflation since 2006 – but employees demanded 3.68x. 8th CPC (Expected 2026): Expectations are of a fitment factor of 2.5x-2.8x, which might increase the employee salaries between Rs 40,000 and Rs 45,000. With the Pay Matrix likely staying, the real battle is over the fitment factor and allowance reforms. Key watchpoints: Will defense/get special fitment? (7th CPC gave them 2.67x). Will HRA, travel allowances be subsumed into basic pay? Can states afford matching revisions? (Kerala's 7th CPC fitment: 2.29x). When Will the 8th Pay Commission Be Formed And Implemented? The 8th Pay Commission was announced by the central government in January this year. However, it is yet to be constituted. Its members, chairman, and terms of reference (ToR) have not been announced yet. According to an ET report citing senior officials, the implementation of the 8th CPC might stretch 'well beyond the expected January 1, 2026, timeline". It said even if the Commission if formed by the end of this year, it will likely require 18-24 months before the recommendations are ready for implementation. The previous 7th Pay Commission was constituted two years before its implementation. Stay updated with all the latest business news, including market trends, stock updates, tax, IPO, banking finance, real estate, savings and investments. Get in-depth analysis, expert opinions, and real-time updates—only on News18. Also Download the News18 App to stay updated! tags : 8th Pay Commission Location : New Delhi, India, India First Published: June 11, 2025, 14:29 IST News business 8th Pay Commission: Grade Pay Vs Pay Bands Vs Pay Matrix, What Are These? How Fitment Factor Changed Under Them


News18
31-05-2025
- Business
- News18
8th Pay Commission: Level 1 Salary May Rise Nearly 40% With 1.92 Fitment Factor
Last Updated: The fitment factor is a multiplier used to calculate the revised basic pay for central government employees when a new pay commission is implemented. 8th Pay Commission: The 8th Pay Commission, officially announced in January 2024, is expected to be set up soon to revise salaries, pensions, and allowances for central government employees and retirees. Historically, pay commissions have revised salaries about every 10 years. The 6th Pay Commission (2006) and the 7th Pay Commission (2016) brought significant increases in basic pay and allowances. The minimum basic salary of central government employees was increased from Rs 2,750 to 7,000 under the 6th CPC, and from 7,000 to Rs 18,000 under 7th CPC. The pressing question among all employees and pensioners is how much their salary is expected to be increased in the 8th pay commission. What Is the Fitment Factor? The fitment factor is a multiplier used to calculate the revised basic pay for central government employees when a new pay commission is implemented. It ensures uniform salary hikes during the transition from the old to the new pay structure. Formula: New Basic Pay = Old Basic Pay × Fitment Factor Under the 7th Pay Commission, the fitment factor was set at 2.57. For instance, if an employee's basic pay was Rs 10,000 under the 6th CPC, their revised pay became: Rs 10,000 × 2.57 = Rs 25,700 According to several reports, the fitment factor could be 1.96 in the 8th pay commission. How Much Level 1 Employee Would See The Salary Hike On Fitment Factor Of 1.92? The 7th Pay Commission, introduced in 2016, replaced the old grade-pay system with a new structure called the Pay Matrix. This system categorizes salaries based on job positions, ranging from level 1 to level 18. Level 1: Entry-level positions such as peon, clerk, MTS If the fitment factor is 1.92, then Level 1 government employees may see a salary jump of around Rs 15,000 per month, which is about a 40% increase in take-home pay under the 8th Pay Commission. First Published: May 26, 2025, 08:24 IST