The highly debated pension standoff between government employee unions and policymakers has taken a pragmatic turn. As the 8th Central Pay Commission (CPC) crosses its six-month milestone since starting its work, employee federations have publicly acknowledged a stark structural reality: a absolute, full rollback of the market-linked National Pension System (NPS) in favor of the traditional Old Pension Scheme (OPS) is logistically and financially unfeasible.
Instead of demanding a complete reversal, discussions behind the scenes are shifting toward a compromise—reforming the existing framework to guarantee stable, inflation-adjusted returns without dismantling the modern financial infrastructure.
The Great Divide: OPS Stability vs. NPS Uncertainty
The tension stems from a fundamental structural difference in how retirement security is handled. The All India NPS Employees Federation (AINPSEF) has been fiercely advocating a return to the principles of the legacy system, pointing to the extreme financial vulnerability of retirees under the current regime.
| Feature | Old Pension Scheme (OPS) | National Pension System (NPS) |
| Funding Model | Entirely government-funded; non-contributory for staff. | Contributory; 10% from employee, 14% from government. |
| Payout Certainty | Guaranteed 50% of the last basic salary plus Dearness Allowance (DA). | Market-linked; payouts depend entirely on corpus performance. |
| Inflation Shield | Automatic protection via biannual DA revisions. | No built-in inflation shielding. |
| The Friction Point | Created an escalating, unfunded fiscal burden on state budgets. | Can result in volatile pensions ranging from ₹200 to ₹2,000 per month for late-career entrants. |
The ₹16.5 Lakh Crore Logjam: Why Full Reversal Fails
The main reason a complete shift back to the old model is practically off the table is the immense scale of the current system. Over nearly two decades of operation, the collective retirement savings of millions of public servants have grown into an enormous ₹16.5 lakh crore pool of capital.
Dr. Manjeet Singh Patel, National President of the AINPSEF, points out that this capital is deeply embedded across the entire Indian financial system, making sudden liquidation incredibly risky:
“If this money is withdrawn suddenly, then first of all it becomes difficult because it is invested in different places. Secondly, the value of the money can also get affected. If NPS is scrapped completely, then this investment flow will stop. It can negatively affect liquidity in the market and financial institutions.”
Because these funds are heavily managed by major state institutions like the State Bank of India (SBI), Life Insurance Corporation (LIC), and UTI, a sudden unwinding would trigger massive capital market shocks, depress asset valuations, and cut off a crucial pipeline of domestic institutional liquidity.
The 8th Pay Commission’s High-Stakes Balancing Act
Led by former Supreme Court Justice Ranjana Prakash Desai—alongside Member-Secretary Pankaj Jain (former IAS) and Professor Pulak Ghosh (Finance Professor at IIM Bangalore and member of the PM’s Economic Advisory Council)—the 8th CPC is entering a critical phase.
The commission is walking a tightrope, tasked with balancing the welfare of nearly 50 lakh active employees and 65 lakh pensioners against the strict demands of fiscal prudence. With the formal deadline for stakeholder submissions open through mid-June, central discussions are prioritizing a major pension reform proposal.
Rather than reverting to an unfunded legacy system, the current approach aims to build an assured pension model. The framework under review aims to guarantee a minimum pension floor set at 67% of the Last Pay Drawn (LPD), scaling up progressively to a 100% salary replacement by age 90. This strategy allows the government to keep the underlying funds productively invested in the market while providing employees the predictable, inflation-protected social security they have been fighting for.
