If you’ve been waiting for clarity on the 8th Pay Commission and whether DA will finally merge with Basic Pay, you’re not alone. Millions of central government employees and pensioners have been hoping for a straight answer—especially with inflation refusing to slow down. And now, Parliament has officially taken up the matter, putting the Finance Ministry in the spotlight.
Here’s what’s happening, why it matters, and what you should genuinely prepare for.
Why December 1 Became Such a Big Deal
On December 1, the Lok Sabha listed a written question that goes right to the heart of employee concerns.
MP Anand Bhadauria asked the Finance Ministry to respond to two major issues:
- Has the 8th Central Pay Commission been officially notified?
- And will DA/DR be merged with Basic Pay as an immediate relief step?
Honestly, these are the exact questions every employee WhatsApp group has been debating for months.
What Parliament Wants the Government to Clarify
The Finance Minister has been asked to give clear answers on five crucial points. Let’s break them down in simple words:
1. Has the 8th Pay Commission been notified?
People want a yes-or-no answer. With 2026 approaching, the pressure for a new Pay Commission has been intense.
2. What’s inside the notification?
If the notification exists, Parliament wants the details:
- Who is on the commission?
- What are the Terms of Reference (ToR)?
- What exactly will the commission study?
3. Will DA be merged with Basic Pay?
This is the big one.
Unions argue DA hasn’t kept pace with real inflation for decades. When DA crosses 50%, employees expect a merger—something last done in 2004 before the 6th CPC.
4. If yes, what’s the timeline?
Because a DA merger doesn’t just give temporary relief—
it raises future increments, HRA, TA, and even retirement benefits.
5. If no, why is the government rejecting it?
This is asked for accountability. People want to know the honest reason behind any refusal.
Why Employee Unions Are Watching Closely
Here’s the thing—DA is supposed to protect salaries from inflation.
But union groups say the formula hasn’t kept up with “real-time retail inflation.”
And with DA already crossing levels that earlier triggered mergers, frustration is natural.
On top of that, the 7th Pay Commission was implemented in 2016, and ten years later, employees expect the next cycle to begin.
Simply put, the December 1 reply isn’t just another routine answer.
It sets the tone for salary structures, negotiations, and government spending for years to come.
What Employees Expected vs What’s Being Asked
| Expectation of Employees | What Parliament Is Asking on Dec 1 |
|---|---|
| Immediate 8th CPC notification | Confirmation + details of the notification |
| DA merger due to rising inflation | Direct question on whether merger is planned |
| Clarity on implementation timeline | If merger is proposed, what’s the schedule? |
| Transparent communication | Reasons if DA merger is not approved |






