Re: Arithmetical Evidence that Appendix 1 Constituted Formula-Based Pension Refixation, not a Simple DA Merger .

165 views
Skip to first unread message

Sanjay J

unread,
Apr 28, 2026, 6:56:01 AM (yesterday) Apr 28
to bankpe...@googlegroups.com, Ramani Konnayar

Click the three dots below the line "With regards", you will see the forwarded message—the original letter sent to Shri K.V. Acharya.

On Tue, Apr 28, 2026 at 11:48 AM Sanjay J <sanjay...@gmail.com> wrote:

Dear Somasekhara ji,

I completely agree. In fact, Shri Ramaniji had raised this point in the forum some time ago. Because it was addressed to another member who did not respond, it initially escaped the attention it deserved.

On April 24th, when he wrote to me directly, I realized that, like a scientist, he had stumbled upon a discovery of immense significance. I immediately felt the need to convey this to those in the best position to use it.

True to that intent, I sent a detailed email to Com. K.V. Acharya with a copy to Shri Sewa Ram (AOR) on Saturday, April 25th. While I am yet to receive a formal reply or acknowledgment, I have done my duty by placing this "Smoking Gun" evidence in their hands.

Whether this finding has been integrated into our senior counsel's strategy will only become clear during the next hearing on the 29th. While I hope we are not too late, the data is now with the leadership and the legal team.

Let us hope this crucial point finds its way into the oral arguments to finally rebut the IBA's "fitment-only" narrative.

With regards,


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Sanjay J <sanjay...@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, Apr 25, 2026 at 10:34 AM
Subject: Arithmetical Evidence that Appendix 1 Constituted Formula-Based Pension Refixation, not a Simple DA Merger .
To: Acharya CBPRO convenor <acharyave...@gmail.com>
Cc: Ramani Konnayar <knra...@gmail.com>, Sewa Ram <sew...@gmail.com>


Date: 25th April 2026

 

To,

Com. K.V. Acharya,

President,

All India Bank Pensioners' and Retirees' Confederation (AIBPARC)

 

Respected Comrade Acharya Ji,

 

Sub: Arithmetical Evidence that Appendix 1 Constituted Formula-Based Pension Refixation, not a Simple DA Merger — Relevance to CA 7993/2023 (M.C. Singla & Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors.)

 

I write to you as a member of the Bank Pensioners' Google Group, an active forum of retired bank employees across the country where matters of pension policy, regulation and litigation are discussed with considerable depth and rigour.

The specific matter I wish to bring to AIBPARC's attention arises from a meticulous arithmetical analysis contributed to our group by Shri K.N. Ramani, (knra...@gmail.com), a retired Canara Bank officer and pensioner whose work I have been following closely. The analysis is entirely his own original contribution, and I write with his full knowledge and at his request, giving him the complete credit he deserves for this important finding.

 

I. The Central Question in CA 7993/2023

The Hon'ble Supreme Court in CA 7993/2023 is called upon to decide whether Regulation 35(1) of the Bank Employees' Pension Regulations, 1995 mandates a genuine periodic updation of pension — one that produces a meaningful increase in real terms — or whether it permits only a cosmetic exercise of merging accumulated Dearness Allowance with basic pension without any substantive loading formula.

The outcome of this question will determine whether hundreds of thousands of bank retirees receive genuine pension updation or a negligible arithmetical rearrangement of their existing entitlements. Shri Ramani's analysis provides historically grounded, quantitative evidence that bears directly on this question.

 

II.  The Appendix 1 Arithmetic

Shri Ramani has reconstructed, from his own pension record and the relevant regulatory provisions, the calculation that was actually carried out under Appendix 1 of the Regulations for 4th BPS retirees — those who retired between 01.01.1986 and 31.10.1987. The results for November 1995, the first month of application, are as follows:

 

 

Particular

A. Without Appendix 1

B. With Appendix 1

Basic Pension

Rs. 830

Rs. 1,383

DA Slabs

305 slabs

238 slabs

DA Rate

1% per slab (305%)

0.67% per slab (159.46%)

DA Amount

Rs. 2,532

Rs. 2,205

Total Pension (Nov 1995)

Rs. 3,362

Rs. 3,588

Increase (B − A): Rs. 3,588 − Rs. 3,362 = Rs. 226 (6.7%)       |       Compounded advantage by February 2026: Rs. 2,202

 

III. The Significance of These Figures

As Shri Ramani has correctly observed, a simple DA merger — by mathematical necessity — cannot produce a 6.7% increase in total pension at the moment of its application. In a simple merger, the DA component is absorbed into basic pension, but the combined total at the moment of merger remains approximately unchanged. The 6.7% increase recorded in November 1995 is therefore conclusive proof that Appendix 1 involved a formula-based refixation of basic pension at a significantly higher figure, with a separately computed DA structure applied on that refixed base.

The initial advantage of Rs. 226 — a meaningful sum in the cost-of-living context of 1995 — has since compounded through every successive DA revision to Rs. 2,202 by February 2026. This compounding trajectory is the hallmark of a genuinely higher pension base, not of a cosmetic merger.

 

IV. The Contrast with the Proposed Simple Merger at 8088 DA Level

Shri Ramani's group discussions have also produced quantitative analysis of the proposed simple DA merger at the 8088 level. For a 6th BPS pensioner with a current total pension of Rs. 38,897, a simple merger at 8088 yields a total pension of Rs. 38,964 — an increase of just Rs. 67, or 0.17%. For 9th, 10th and 11th BPS retirees, the result is reportedly a marginal reduction, which is an arithmetical absurdity that no updation exercise should produce.

This contrast — Rs. 226 (6.7%) under Appendix 1 vs. Rs. 67 (0.17%) under a simple 8088 merger — establishes beyond reasonable doubt that:

         Appendix 1 was not a simple merger. It was a substantive, formula-based pension refixation.

         A simple merger at 8088, without any loading formula, cannot constitute genuine pension updation.

         Regulation 35(1), interpreted consistently with the historical practice established by Appendix 1 — which is universally accepted and was never challenged — must require formula-based refixation, not mere merger.

 

 

Summary Comparison

Criterion

Simple Merger (8088)

Appendix 1 Method

Nature of exercise

DA absorbed into basic

Formula-based refixation

Basic pension change

Increases by DA amount

Independently computed higher figure

Typical first increase

Rs 28 to Rs 67 (0.1–0.2%)

Rs 226 (6.7%)

Long-term compounding

Minimal

Substantial (Rs 2,202 by 2026)

Cases with reduction

9th, 10th, 11th BPS

None

Qualifies as updation?

Doubtful

Yes

 

 

V. Requests to AIBPARC

In view of the above, and in continuation of AIBPARC's commendable efforts in pursuing CA 7993/2023, I respectfully request the following:

 

         Communication to legal counsel in CA 7993/2023: The arithmetical evidence reconstructed by Shri Ramani — particularly the Appendix 1 calculation for November 1995 — should be formally placed before the legal team. It provides quantitative, historically grounded support for the petitioners' case. If original PPOs of 4th BPS retirees reflecting the Appendix 1 formula can be identified and produced, they would constitute valuable primary documentary evidence.

 

         Formal representation to IBA and Ministry of Finance: AIBPARC may consider placing on record, in writing, that the historical practice under Appendix 1 involved formula-based refixation and not mere merger — so as to counter any administrative claim that a simple 8088 merger is consistent with the purpose and history of Regulation 35(1).

 

         Circular to member pensioners: A communication to members — particularly 4th BPS retirees who experienced the Appendix 1 refixation firsthand — explaining this argument and inviting them to contribute supporting documentation or evidence through appropriate channels, would greatly strengthen the collective case.

 

I am grateful to Shri K.N. Ramani for permitting me to present his analysis to AIBPARC, and I take this opportunity to acknowledge once again that the intellectual contribution in this letter is entirely his. He is available to provide any further details or supporting material that may be required, and I look forward to AIBPARC's valued response.

 

With warm regards and fraternal greetings,

Sanjay J

Member, Bank Pensioners' Google Group

Sanjay J

unread,
Apr 28, 2026, 6:56:02 AM (yesterday) Apr 28
to bankpe...@googlegroups.com, Ramani Konnayar

JSOMA SHEKARA

unread,
12:16 AM (16 hours ago) 12:16 AM
to bankpe...@googlegroups.com
Thank you Mr,Sanjay Ji. Let us hope advocates of the petitioners will use this as evidence in their arguments on 29th.

--
Visit our blog site http:://bankpensioner.blogspot.com
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "bankpensioner" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to bankpensione...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/bankpensioner/CAP9-UeL5SStaZvsbzO2pOE2YTVwh2rtXqasi36rJDj8GUNt4uw%40mail.gmail.com.

Sanjay J

unread,
6:20 AM (10 hours ago) 6:20 AM
to bankpe...@googlegroups.com

Dear Members,

Many of us have been anxiously following the proceedings in CA 7993/2023 today.

It is important to note that the 5th Triennial National Conference of AIBPARC has been taking place in Kochi over the last few days, concluding only today. Shri K.V. Acharya and the entire leadership team have naturally been deeply immersed in conducting this significant event.

Given these circumstances, we cannot say with certainty whether the leadership had the opportunity to review our technical brief and relay its contents to the legal counsel before today’s hearing. It is entirely possible that the legal team already had a similar line of argument, or that our specific data has not reached them yet. We simply do not know the status at this moment.

Therefore, I advise members to remain cautious and not place excessive expectations on our specific letter having influenced today’s oral proceedings. However, we can say with absolute confidence that the argument itself—grounded in Shri Ramani’s meticulous arithmetic—is fundamentally sound. It remains a potent asset that can be used in supplementary written submissions or any further proceedings that may follow.

Let us wait for the official update on today's court outcome with a calm outlook.

With warm regards.


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages