Business
Central Govt Employees Retiring In Middle Of The Year Will Be Paid Proportionate Money For THIS Allowance
New Delhi: 7th Pay Commission Update: The central government has issued a new clarification regarding the payment and recovery of dress allowance for its employees. In a new circular the government stated that both new recruits and employees retiring after July 30, 2025, would get their due proportionate dress allowance money in their July 2025 salary. However, employees who retire from October 2025 onwards will face recovery of any overpayment that was already made.
Dress allowance on proportionate basis
In the circular dated September 24, 2025, the central government said: “With respect to the dress allowance to the officials retiring after July, 2025, it was mentioned in the aforesaid OM dated 16.06.2025 that a clarification was being sought from MoF and till the receipt of such clarification the prevalent instructions dated 05.03.2020 would continue to be followed in their cases.
Now, the MoF vide L.D. No. 19051/2/2025-E.IV Department of Expenditure, dated 16.09.2025 has advised that the payment of Dress Allowance to officials retiring in the middle of the year may also be regulated on a proportionate basis, in the same manner as prescribed for new joinees under this Department’s OM dated 24.03.2025, so as to maintain consistency and uniformity.”
Clarifications on payment and recovery
The government said that the payment of the dress allowance has been made along with the pay and allowances for the month of July, 2025. Accordingly, the dress allowance would already have been disbursed to all entitled employees, including those retiring in the middle of the year, either at full rates or half the rates.
In view of the fresh instructions of the DoE, the government has decided to supersede the previous order dated March 5, 2020 and June 16, 2025 as under:
a) The entitled officials retiring in the middle of the year for uniform will be paid proportionate dress allowance with effect from June 2025.
b) Recovery of excess proportionate amount from those employees whose retirement falls in October 2025 onwards may be made from the pay and allowances for the month of October 2025.
c) No recovery would be effected from those who have already retired as on date or who are due to retire on September 30, 2025.
Dress Allowance for new recruits
The government said that with regard to the payment of dress allowance to newly recruited officials joining after July 2024, it was observed that in some circles, the dress allowance for the last year has not been included in the pay and allowances of July 2025.
Reiterating the rule, the circular stated that all new recruits who joined between June 2025 and July 2024 are entitled to dress allowance in accordance with the instructions dated June 16, 2025.
Business
Britain ‘mustn’t cut ourselves off from China trade opportunities’, CBI chief warns
The UK must not “cut ourselves off” from trade opportunities in China despite security and business risks, the head of the Confederation for British Industry has warned.
CBI chief Rain Newton-Smith highlighted that British businesses see increased trade with Chinese firms as an opportunity to drive growth.
Her remarks came as business leaders were questioned by MPs on Parliament’s Business and Trade Select Committee regarding the UK’s economic relationship with China.
Last December, Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer admitted China poses security threats to the UK but urged for greater business ties.
Ms Newton-Smith, chief executive of one of the UK’s largest business groups, was positive about the Government’s engagement with China.
“You can’t have a growth strategy without a strategy for China,” she said.
“China has the biggest contribution to global growth, is the third largest trading partner, and the world’s largest consumer market.
“The UK is second largest exporter of trade and services.
“We are mindful as all businesses are of security risks but it is really important that we have a strategy towards China.
“This Government has increased the economic engagement with China and including business within this does help us as a country.”
She added: “If we think about the future economy, there is a huge market in China and I think we mustn’t cut ourselves off from some of the opportunities there, even if in some areas there are difficult conversations and negotiations that need to be had.”
Peter Burnett, chief executive of the China-Britain Business Council, told the committee: “There are risks associated with technology advancement, AI, industrial development that they need to assess.
“Increasingly you will find them saying that they need to engage more in China to understand those risks and to develop some of the technologies along some of those risks themselves.”
Business
Trump says he’d be disappointed if Fed pick doesn’t cut rates; Warsh vows to be ‘independent actor’ – The Times of India
US President Donald Trump on Tuesday said he would be disappointed if his nominee for Federal Reserve chair, Kevin Warsh, does not cut interest rates right away after taking office if confirmed by the Senate. Trump, during an interview with CNBC’s “Squawk Box,” also said “we have to find out” about the construction costs of the new Federal Reserve building.Warsh, a former Federal Reserve official and financier, is currently facing Senate confirmation hearings where he has stressed his independence from political pressure.“The president never once asked me to commit to any particular interest rate decision, and nor would I agree to it if he had,” Kevin Warsh said under questioning by the Senate Banking Committee, as quoted by LA Times. “I will be an independent actor if confirmed as chair of the Federal Reserve.”Warsh told lawmakers that fighting inflation would be one of his main priorities if confirmed.“Congress tasked the Fed with the mission to ensure price stability, without excuse or equivocation, argument or anguish,” Warsh said. “Inflation is a choice, and the Fed must take responsibility for it.”The comments come as investors closely watch his confirmation hearing, with inflation remaining at 3.3% annually and global tensions, including the war in Iran pushing up gas prices, adding pressure on the economy. Higher inflation typically leads the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates steady or raise them rather than cut them, as rate changes affect mortgages, auto loans, and business borrowing.Democrats on the Senate Banking Committee accused Warsh of shifting his stance on interest rates over time, supporting higher rates under Democratic presidents and lower rates during Trump’s presidency.Warsh, if confirmed, would take over at a time when inflation pressures make it difficult for the Federal Reserve to cut rates, even as Trump continues to push for lower borrowing costs. Trump has repeatedly urged rate cuts and has long clashed with current Fed chair Jerome Powell over monetary policy. Powell has also been the subject of a Department of Justice criminal probe after refusing Trump’s requests for faster rate cuts. Trump told CNBC that he does not plan to pressure the Justice Department to end that probe.
Business
Air fares soar by nearly a quarter, research shows
The consultancy Teneo says airspace restrictions caused by the conflict have forced airlines to reroute many flights.
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