7th CPC: Pay hike for University staff, faculty likely in July - ET News
NEW DELHI: The much-awaited pay revision for lakhs of faculty and
staffers across higher education institutes is likely to get a go-ahead
by Guru Purnima (July 9), effecting an average of 15% salary hike with
effect from January 1, 2016.
The Human Resource Development ministry is set to take Cabinet approval
to grant an average 15% hike to about eight lakh faculty and staff
across all Central and state universities as well as the Centrally
funded technical institutes, including IITs, IIMs, NITs, IISERs, sources
told ET.
The pay hike—estimated to cost the government Rs 75,000 crore over three
years—was also taken up for discussion at the PMO on Monday, ET has
learnt.
The last pay revision for teachers in 2006 gave them a pay packet higher
than a civil servant and the edge is likely to stay. While academic pay
scales are different from civil servants, it is expected that an
assistant professor will be paid about Rs 1600 more at basic level vis a
vis an entrant civil servant.
The pay revision will benefit about 7.5-8 lakh faculty and staff in
state government-funded colleges and universities, 30,000 employees at
the Central Universities and about 30,000 at centrally funded technical
institutes.
While the cost estimates for central universities and CFTIs is Rs 600
crore each, with the Centre bearing half the cost for states, it will
amount to about Rs 12,000 crore. The pay hike will apply to the next
three years, mapping on the 7th Pay Commission recommendations to the
educational institutes and according a near 15% average salary
increment, sources said.
As per 7th pay commission fitment formula, a teacher's salary will be
revised by a multiplier of 2.72 (applied to the basic salary and
academic grade pay) for professor and above and a multiplier of 2.67 for
assistant professor and above.
Issues of service conditions and tenure will be left for the University Grants Commission to address.
The Pay Review Committee constituted by the UGC had submitted its report
to the ministry in February recommending a 20% hike. The pay panel
committee for CFTIs had sought a hike in the Cumulat ive Professional
Development Allowance for faculty to encourage research work and global
exposure for faculty pay parity for Directors of all institutions. While
the CPDA hike has been accepted by the HRD ministry, it has been
decided to retain the higher salary structure for directors of
institutes of national importance.
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