HomeNewsIndiaOROP | Supreme Court order helps hit the pause button on a thorny issue

OROP | Supreme Court order helps hit the pause button on a thorny issue

Of the many concerns surrounding the OROP debate, one of the most important relates to its impact on India’s defence budget. More than 30 percent of the 2020-21 budget was gobbled up by pension entitlements — a growth rate which may become unsustainable for the government in the near future

March 18, 2022 / 10:59 IST
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The Indian Army
The Indian Army

The Supreme Court ruling on the controversial One Rank, One Pension (OROP) issue on March 16 can hardly be considered the last word on a debate which has consumed so much of heart and mind space in India’s military over the years.

The demand for OROP has been one of independent India’s biggest challenges, and many of today's serving military personnel — all second and third generation soldiers — are deeply-distressed by its non-implementation, despite the lip service of successive governments. The court was deliberating on the challenge by an association of retired defence personnel that there was ‘constitutional infirmity’ in the way the government had announced OROP to ex-service personnel in November 2015. The apex court dismissed the plea.

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OROP seeks to ensure that all armed forces personnel who retire at an identical rank after serving for the same number of years get equal pension benefits, regardless of the date when they step down from service. Current rules stipulate that those who retired before 2006 are paid a lower pension than their counterparts who retired afterwards.

This apparent paradox has a lot to do with the different career progression trajectories of the rank and file of the armed forces, with those in lower ranks usually retiring early. Since pensions are calculated on the last pay cheque they receive in service, these retirees have to forgo the potential benefits from subsequent pay commissions.