Business Standard

Central workforce may fall by 50K in ’25

- ASIT RANJAN MISHRA

The workforce in central government department­s, excluding the central public sector enterprise­s (CPSES), is estimated to decline by approximat­ely 50,000 employees by March 2025.

The overall expenditur­e on pay and allowances, however, is expected to increase by 6.9 per cent to ~3.2 trillion in the financial year 2024-25, according to the latest Interim Budget documents.

The Interim Budget documents for FY25 show central government employee strength is estimated to peak in 2024 at 3.51 million, growing 12 per cent over the preceding year.

The 1.4 per cent decline projected for 2025 is driven by a 5.6 per cent (72,000) dip in the strength of the railway employees to 1.2 million by next year. Other key central government establishm­ents such as police, posts, and defence (civil) are estimated to see a marginal increase in workforce by March 1 next year.

Replying to a question in the Rajya Sabha in December 2023, Minister of State in the Ministry of Personnel, Public Grievances and Pensions, Jitendra Singh, said instructio­ns were issued to all ministries/department­s of the central government to constitute an in-house committee for identifica­tion of backlog reserved vacancies, to study the root cause of such vacancies, to initiate measures to remove the factors causing such vacancies and to fill them up through special recruitmen­t drives.

“Each ministry/department of the central government is required to designate an officer of the rank of deputy secretary and above, as liaison officer, to ensure due compliance of the orders and instructio­ns about reservatio­n. Further, each ministry/department is required to set up a Special Reservatio­n Cell under the direct control of the liaison officer to assist her/him in the discharge of duties. Implementa­tion of these instructio­ns by ministries/department­s is followed up from time to time and handholdin­g workshops are also organised,” he added. In a separate reply in the Rajya Sabha, in July 2023, Singh said that according to the Annual Report of Pay Research Units of the Department of Expenditur­e, the number of vacancies in Group A, B, and C as of 1 March 2022 was 30,606; 110,000 and 820,000, respective­ly.

According to the Department of Expenditur­e order in April 2017, when a post remains vacant for more than two to three years, the same becomes “deemed abolished”.

Ashwini Vaishnaw, railways minister, informed Rajya Sabha in December 2023 that recruitmen­ts are done periodical­ly, anticipati­ng vacancies and the needs on the ground.

“The requiremen­t of manpower in different categories also differs based on the change in priorities and technology upgradatio­ns. Railways have a dynamic process for identifyin­g vacancies to be filled up and fill up the same in a continual manner. The vacancies are filled up primarily by placement of indents by Railways with recruitmen­t agencies as per operationa­l requiremen­ts. As many as 2,94,115 vacancies were filled up in the last five years, up to September 30, 2023,” he added.

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