New Delhi: Feb-27 : The Union
Cabinet on Friday will decide on a series of populist measures and some
ordinances on anti-graft and protection of rights bills at a meeting
possibly the last before the model code of conduct could come into force
for coming Lok Sabha polls.
A proposal to increase the poll
expenditure cap up to Rs 70 lakh per contestant from Rs 40 lakh now is
also on the table of the cabinet meeting.
The cabinet will also decide on hiking
dearness allowance to 100 per cent from existing 90 per cent, benefiting
50 lakh employees and 30 lakh pensioners.
The hike in DA would be effective from
January 1 this year. Another proposal which will bring cheers to
pensioners is to ensure Rs 1,000 minimum monthly pension under the
pension scheme run by retirement fund body EPFO, which would immediately
benefit 28 lakh pensioners.
The cabinet is likely to consider a
clarification on the decision for supply of 12 subsidised LPG cylinders
per household in a year.
The government had last month raised the
cap on supply of cheaper LPG from 9 to 12 cylinders of 14.2-kg each. It
was inferred that this meant one cylinder in a month.
The ministry has proposed to the cabinet
that consumers should have the freedom to book a refill after 21 days
with an overall cap of 12 subsidised bottles in a year.
When the model code of conduct goes into
force with the announcement of the election schedule, no populist
measure can be made public and any policy decision can be announced only
with the clearance of the Election Commission.
Sources said the cabinet may also
consider raising the retirement age of government employees from 60 to
62 years. The raising of superannuation age was originally a part of the
Terms of Reference of the Seventh Pay Commission.
Since the Commission report is expected not before 2017, a decision on raising the retirement age cannot happen before that.
So, the reference to retirement age has
been removed from the ToR of the 7th Pay Commission and it is speculated
that the same may be brought as a supplementary agenda.
Sources have not ruled out a proposal
before the cabinet to provide 'special category' status to Andhra
Pradesh for development of Seemandhra region on the ground of revenue
loss following the bifurcation.
The sources said Planning Commission's
Deputy Chairman Montek Singh Ahluwalia had met Rural Development
Minister Jairam Ramesh recently to fine tune the proposal.
The cabinet could also approve six
ordinances on bills pending in Parliament. Three ordinances which had
lapsed last month could also be re-promulgated.
Three anti-corruption bills --
Prevention of Corruption (Amendment) Bill, Right of Citizens for
Time-Bound Delivery of Goods and Services and Redressal of their
Grievances Bill and the Public Procurement Bill -- are likely to be
approved as ordinances.
Along with these, the SC/ST (Prevention
of Atrocities) Amendment Bill, Rights of Persons with Disability Bill,
Security Laws (Amendment) Bill, ordinances on Medical Council of India
and another which gives Election Commission limited powers to make
changes in Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe constituencies, where
some castes have been either excluded or included between the 2001
census and May 2012, are also likely to be approved by the cabinet.
An ordinance seeking to enhance the
pecuniary jurisdiction of civil suits of the Delhi High Court from
existing Rs 20 lakh to Rs 2 crore will also come up.
The Delhi High Court (Amendment) Bill,
2014, introduced in the Rajya Sabha recently, aims at reducing workload
of the Delhi High Court by transferring thousands of civil suits, valued
up to Rs 2 crore, to the nine district courts in Delhi.
PTI
Source : http://zeenews.india.com/
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