Understanding Pay Fixation of Re‑employed Ex‑Servicemen (PBOR) in Civil Posts

What is the Pay Fixation Issue

Thousands of Personnel Below Officer Rank (PBOR) leave the Armed Forces at 37‑40 years—nearly two decades before the standard civilian superannuation age. To soften this early exit the Government of India (GoI) permits re‑employment in ministries, departments, public‑sector banks (PSBs) and other bodies. How­ever, the benefit that matters most—pay fixation—is implemented unevenly.
Tracing the Rules, Exposing the Disparity, and Charting a Way Forward.

  • Central departments usually give only entry pay of the civil post.
  • PSBs/PSUs generally grant the higher of two figures: entry pay or the last basic pay drawn in uniform.
    The result is a widening earnings gap between two former soldiers doing identical civil work—one in a ministry, one in a bank—despite serving the same nation in combat. This article explains how the divergence arose, why recent court rulings have failed to close it, and what a practicable remedy could look like.

Policy Evolution at a Glance

YearInstrumentKey change for re‑employed pensioners
1958 & 1964MoF (Estt‑III) OMsFirst codified concessions for ex‑servicemen. Pay was fixed considering number of years served in the armed forces and equal number of advanced increments allowed considering the pay of reemployed post always lower than the last pay drawn , so hardship is treated. Such pay fixation termed as fixation of pay at minimum only.
31 Jul 1986CCS (Fixation of Pay of Re‑employed Pensioners) Orders, 1986Created the still‑operative Rule 4(b) twin regime—• PBOR / below Gp‑A: ignore entire pension & fix at minimum of civil scale (Rule 4(b)(i))• Commissioned/Gp‑A: ignore part of pension & fix at “same stage” last drawn pay (Rule 4(b)(ii)) (DOPT Circulars). Hardship consideration has been removed.
11 Nov 2008 & 05 Apr 2010DoPT OMsExtended 6ᵗʰ CPC scales to persons already on re‑employment; reiterated the two‑track fixation logic.
01 May 2017DoPT OM No. 3/3/2016‑Estt.(Pay II)Applied 7ᵗʰ CPC pay rules to re‑employed staff; raised pension‑plus‑pay ceiling to ₹2.25 lakh; ignorable pension for officers hiked to ₹15,000
Post‑2017 sectoral circulars• Indian Banks Assn (11ᵗʰ/12ᵗʰ BPS)• DFS letters to PSBsEndorsed same‑stage fixation or protection of last pay for all ranks entering banks after Nov 2022
GoI answer in Lok Sabha, 2 Apr 2025Clarified that Dept. of Posts continues to apply Rule 4(b)(i); no new general policy issued .

 Pay Fixation vs. Pay Protection—Not the Same Thing

  • Pay fixation decides the starting basic pay in the civil post on Day 1.
  • Pay protection ensures that future reductions (e.g., on deputation) do not push pay below an earlier bench‑mark.
    The 1986 Orders deal only with fixation, not protection, yet these terms are routinely (and incorrectly) interchanged in office correspondence.

Present‑Day Practice—A Tale of Two Employers

Re‑employing bodyRule actually followed for PBORMonthly impact*
Ministries / Dept. of Posts / CGA / RailwaysEntry‑pay of Grade Pay/Pay‑Level per Rule 4(b)(i)‑₹20,000 → ‑₹40,000 (Loss every months)
PSBs / LIC / many PSUsSame stage as last basic pay (after ignoring full pension)A gain of at least 20,000/ pm in basic pay.

*Illustration for a Havildar (Level 5) retiring on basic ₹45,500 and entering a Level 4 civil post whose entry pay is ₹25,500.

Courts thus acknowledge inequity but deem it legal under current wording.

Why the Disparity Persists

  1. Binary drafting of Rule 4(b)—PBOR placed in the “ignore full pension, take entry pay” bucket intended for non‑pensioners in 1950s economy.
  2. Sector‑specific adaptations—FinMin’s 1989/2013 instructions let banks refix pay to retain talent, creating a precedent ministries never adopted.
  3. Administrative caution—Audit flags and fear of recovery prompt departments to choose the safest interpretation—entry pay.
  4. Unequal advocacy channels—Officer cohorts historically occupied policy desks; PBOR lobby power is newer, explaining faster concessions for Gp‑A.

Human & Fiscal Impact

  • For the individual: A 15‑year civil career can forfeit ₹18‑22 lakh in cumulative basic‑pay, translating to lower DA, HRA and post‑civil‑service pension.
  • For government: Savings are marginal—roughly 0.02 % of the annual pay bill of the concerned departments—yet the policy costs morale and triggers litigation.

8. Emerging Pressure Points

  • Veteran organisations plan a nationwide protest on 23 July 2025 with pay‑fixation parity as a core demand with other issues.
  • Dept. of Posts’ heads of circle have sought “nodal‑ministry clarification” after local audit objections, indicating grassroots unrest.

 A Practicable Solution—Targeted Amendment

Proposed wording to replace Rule 4(b)(i):

(i) Where the entire pension is ignored at the option of the pensioner, initial pay shall be fixed either at the entry pay of the post or at the stage equal to the substantive basic pay last drawn in the Defence Forces, whichever is higher. No deduction on account of pension shall be made when the entire pension stands ignored under para 4(d)(i).

Why it works

  • Retains the “pension‑ignored” philosophy but lets PBOR benefit from their earned increment stage.
  • Mirrors the flexibility already enjoyed in PSBs, promoting inter‑sector equity.
  • Keeps the 7ᵗʰ CPC ceiling (₹2.25 lakh) intact, so no officer feels disadvantaged.
  • Avoids reopening settled Supreme Court ratio because it offers an option rather than a mandate.

Additional Recommendations

  1. Issue a consolidated master OM that collates 1958 → 2025 instructions to eliminate piecemeal reading.
  2. Standardised fixation pro‑forma for all cadres, vetted by DoPT & CGA, to cut audit objections.
  3. Synchronise ignorable‑pension limits—what is ₹15,000 for officers should not remain ₹0 for PBOR.
  4. Create an e‑tracking dashboard within SPARROW/HR‑Soft for expeditious disposal of pay‑fixation cases (90‑day SLA).

 Conclusion

The Armed Forces do not fight rank‑wise wars; a bullet does not distinguish between a Jawan and a Captain. Yet, once the uniform comes off, the pay‑fixation rulebook does. Courts have said the current arrangement is constitutional—but they have also signalled that equity is a policy choice, not a judicial decree. The proposed tweak to Rule 4(b)(i) is modest, fiscally minimal and administratively familiar (PSBs show it works). Implementing it would not just honour a soldier’s service; it would reaffirm the Republic’s own promise of reasonable equality of opportunity to those who risked life and limb in its defence.

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