MP Govt Employees Lost Rs 15,345 Cr to DA Delays

Digital Desk

MP Govt Employees Lost Rs 15,345 Cr to DA Delays

Madhya Pradesh government employees lost an estimated Rs 15,345 crore due to years of delayed DA revisions. State now aligns dearness allowance at 58% with Centre, benefiting 10 lakh employees and pensioners.

MP Govt Employees Lost Rs 15,345 Crore to Delayed DA Revisions Over Years

State finally aligns dearness allowance with Centre at 58%, but years of deferred hikes left lakhs of employees bearing the real cost of inflation


For years, Madhya Pradesh government employees watched their purchasing power quietly erode while the state dragged its feet on revising dearness allowance in step with the Central government. A detailed analysis of the cumulative gap between DA rates applicable at the central level and those actually disbursed by the state exchequer over multiple pay commission cycles puts the estimated financial shortfall borne by employees at approximately Rs 15,345 crore — a figure that underscores just how costly delayed policy decisions can be for those at the receiving end of government salaries.

The Long-Pending Relief

The Madhya Pradesh government has approved a 3 per cent hike in dearness allowance for state employees and pensioners, raising the total rate to 58 per cent with effect from July 1, 2025. The decision, taken by the Council of Ministers, aligns the state's DA with the Central government's rate under the 7th Pay Commission and aims to provide relief amid persistently rising living costs.

While the announcement is being welcomed across employee circles, union representatives have pointed out that it comes after a prolonged period during which state employees effectively subsidised the government's fiscal management by receiving less than their central counterparts — a gap that compounded across successive pay revision cycles.

Who Benefits and at What Cost

The DA hike will benefit around 10 lakh persons, including nearly three lakh pensioners, and will cost the state exchequer approximately Rs 2,450 crore annually. That recurring annual burden, seen against years of deferred revisions, begins to explain how the cumulative loss to employees reached the scale that analysts and union representatives have widely cited.

The revised rate will be paid along with April salaries, which are typically credited in May. Chief Minister Mohan Yadav has confirmed that the state will also release arrears covering the period between July 2025 and March 2026.

Arrears in Six Instalments

Arrears from July 1, 2025 to March 31, 2026 will be paid in six equal instalments. The first instalment is scheduled for May, followed by payments in June, July, August, September, and October. Employees who retired between January 1, 2025 and March 31, 2026 will receive the full arrear amount in a single payment. The same provision applies to families of employees who passed away during this period.

Pensioners Get Relief Too

For pensioners and family pensioners, dearness relief has been set at 58 per cent under the 7th Pay Commission and 257 per cent under the 6th Pay Commission, effective from January 1, 2026. This is a significant provision for the nearly three lakh retired government servants who depend on pension as their primary source of income and have borne the brunt of inflation without adequate compensation over recent years.

A History of Deferred Decisions

The pattern of delay is not new. As recently as mid-2025, the state was still working to bridge a significant DA gap. The allowance for employees on the 7th Pay Commission scale was raised by 3 per cent from July 2024, taking it to 53 per cent, and by another 2 per cent from January 2025, pushing it to 55 per cent. Each of these incremental corrections — rather than timely, rule-based revisions — added to the total income loss employees absorbed in real terms.

Employee unions have long argued that deferring DA is effectively a silent wage cut. With retail inflation eating into monthly budgets, the lag between when DA should have been revised and when it was actually sanctioned meant that lakhs of families were stretched thinner than necessary.

Cabinet Clears Big-Ticket Spending

The DA decision came alongside broader fiscal approvals at the Mohan Yadav cabinet meeting. Among other measures cleared was Rs 82.39 crore for the Mahana Micro Irrigation Project in Rewa district, along with development and construction works valued at Rs 6,940 crore — signalling that the government is simultaneously pushing infrastructure investment while addressing long-standing employee grievances.

What Employees Are Watching For

With DA now at par with the Centre for the first time in recent memory, attention is turning to whether this alignment will be sustained or whether delays will creep back into the cycle. Employee federations have consistently demanded that DA revisions be automatic and timely — effective from January 1 and July 1 of each year — rather than subject to periodic cabinet discretion.

The Chief Minister's announcement, made during a festive occasion and framed as a gesture to the state's approximately seven lakh serving employees across departments, carried an unmistakable political tone. Whether it signals a structural commitment to timely revision or remains a one-off exercise is a question that 10 lakh employees and pensioners across Madhya Pradesh will be watching closely in the months ahead.

The Rs 15,345 crore figure is not just a statistic. It represents real income that millions of households never received, at a time when the cost of groceries, fuel, and healthcare was already pressing hard on middle-class budgets across the state.

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28 Mar 2026 By Nitin Trivedi

MP Govt Employees Lost Rs 15,345 Cr to DA Delays

Digital Desk

MP Govt Employees Lost Rs 15,345 Crore to Delayed DA Revisions Over Years

State finally aligns dearness allowance with Centre at 58%, but years of deferred hikes left lakhs of employees bearing the real cost of inflation


For years, Madhya Pradesh government employees watched their purchasing power quietly erode while the state dragged its feet on revising dearness allowance in step with the Central government. A detailed analysis of the cumulative gap between DA rates applicable at the central level and those actually disbursed by the state exchequer over multiple pay commission cycles puts the estimated financial shortfall borne by employees at approximately Rs 15,345 crore — a figure that underscores just how costly delayed policy decisions can be for those at the receiving end of government salaries.

The Long-Pending Relief

The Madhya Pradesh government has approved a 3 per cent hike in dearness allowance for state employees and pensioners, raising the total rate to 58 per cent with effect from July 1, 2025. The decision, taken by the Council of Ministers, aligns the state's DA with the Central government's rate under the 7th Pay Commission and aims to provide relief amid persistently rising living costs.

While the announcement is being welcomed across employee circles, union representatives have pointed out that it comes after a prolonged period during which state employees effectively subsidised the government's fiscal management by receiving less than their central counterparts — a gap that compounded across successive pay revision cycles.

Who Benefits and at What Cost

The DA hike will benefit around 10 lakh persons, including nearly three lakh pensioners, and will cost the state exchequer approximately Rs 2,450 crore annually. That recurring annual burden, seen against years of deferred revisions, begins to explain how the cumulative loss to employees reached the scale that analysts and union representatives have widely cited.

The revised rate will be paid along with April salaries, which are typically credited in May. Chief Minister Mohan Yadav has confirmed that the state will also release arrears covering the period between July 2025 and March 2026.

Arrears in Six Instalments

Arrears from July 1, 2025 to March 31, 2026 will be paid in six equal instalments. The first instalment is scheduled for May, followed by payments in June, July, August, September, and October. Employees who retired between January 1, 2025 and March 31, 2026 will receive the full arrear amount in a single payment. The same provision applies to families of employees who passed away during this period.

Pensioners Get Relief Too

For pensioners and family pensioners, dearness relief has been set at 58 per cent under the 7th Pay Commission and 257 per cent under the 6th Pay Commission, effective from January 1, 2026. This is a significant provision for the nearly three lakh retired government servants who depend on pension as their primary source of income and have borne the brunt of inflation without adequate compensation over recent years.

A History of Deferred Decisions

The pattern of delay is not new. As recently as mid-2025, the state was still working to bridge a significant DA gap. The allowance for employees on the 7th Pay Commission scale was raised by 3 per cent from July 2024, taking it to 53 per cent, and by another 2 per cent from January 2025, pushing it to 55 per cent. Each of these incremental corrections — rather than timely, rule-based revisions — added to the total income loss employees absorbed in real terms.

Employee unions have long argued that deferring DA is effectively a silent wage cut. With retail inflation eating into monthly budgets, the lag between when DA should have been revised and when it was actually sanctioned meant that lakhs of families were stretched thinner than necessary.

Cabinet Clears Big-Ticket Spending

The DA decision came alongside broader fiscal approvals at the Mohan Yadav cabinet meeting. Among other measures cleared was Rs 82.39 crore for the Mahana Micro Irrigation Project in Rewa district, along with development and construction works valued at Rs 6,940 crore — signalling that the government is simultaneously pushing infrastructure investment while addressing long-standing employee grievances.

What Employees Are Watching For

With DA now at par with the Centre for the first time in recent memory, attention is turning to whether this alignment will be sustained or whether delays will creep back into the cycle. Employee federations have consistently demanded that DA revisions be automatic and timely — effective from January 1 and July 1 of each year — rather than subject to periodic cabinet discretion.

The Chief Minister's announcement, made during a festive occasion and framed as a gesture to the state's approximately seven lakh serving employees across departments, carried an unmistakable political tone. Whether it signals a structural commitment to timely revision or remains a one-off exercise is a question that 10 lakh employees and pensioners across Madhya Pradesh will be watching closely in the months ahead.

The Rs 15,345 crore figure is not just a statistic. It represents real income that millions of households never received, at a time when the cost of groceries, fuel, and healthcare was already pressing hard on middle-class budgets across the state.

https://english.dainikjagranmpcg.com/states/madhya-pradesh/-mp-govt-employees-lost-rs-15345-cr-to-da/article-16124

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