Unified Pension Scheme Offers Guaranteed Payout for Central Government Employees in India

The Finance Ministry has announced the Unified Pension Scheme (UPS), offering a guaranteed pension of 50% of the average basic salary from the last year before retirement. This scheme is available to Central Government employees under the National Pension System (NPS) who opt for it. However, it excludes those dismissed, removed, or resigned from service.

New Unified Pension Scheme for Government Employees

Unified Pension Scheme Details

According to a notification dated January 24, the full assured payout rate is set at 50% of the average basic pay over the last 12 months before retirement. This is contingent on a minimum qualifying service of 25 years, contrasting with NPS's market-linked returns. Employees with less service will receive a proportional payout, with a minimum guaranteed payout of Rs 10,000 monthly for those retiring after at least ten years of service.

The UPS will become operational on April 1, 2025. For voluntary retirees with at least 25 years of service, payouts start from their notional retirement date. In case of death post-retirement, the spouse receives 60% of the payout previously given to the retiree. Dearness Relief applies to both assured and family payouts, calculated similarly to serving employees' Dearness Allowance.

Transition and Contribution Changes

Existing Central Government employees under NPS can choose between UPS and NPS from April 1, 2025. Future employees also have this choice. Once an employee opts for UPS, their Permanent Retirement Account Number corpus transfers to their individual UPS corpus. The Head of Office will determine qualifying service at retirement.

The Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority may establish regulations for UPS implementation. The scheme will increase government contributions from 14% to 18.5%, effective April 1, 2025. The Union Cabinet approved this on August 24, 2024.

Comparing Pension Schemes

Under the old pension scheme (OPS), which was in effect before January 2004, employees received half of their last drawn basic pay as pension without contributing. They did contribute to the General Provident Fund (GPF), receiving accumulated amounts with interest upon retirement.

In contrast, UPS requires employees to contribute 10% of their basic salary and dearness allowance. The government contributes 18.5%. The final payout depends on market returns from investments in government debt.

Some states reverted to OPS due to NPS's lower attractiveness compared to OPS's DA-linked benefits. This led the Centre to form a committee in April 2023 under TV Somanathan to improve NPS architecture.

The new scheme aims to provide more security for government employees while balancing contributions and market returns.

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