Tax Shadow Over Centennial Honours: Attack on Disability Pensions Must Be Reversed
Tax Shadow Over Centennial Honours: Attack on
Disability Pensions Must Be Reversed
Colonel Sanjay Mani Pradhan, Veteran
The relationship between a nation and a soldier is not a
simple employment contract. It is a relationship of trust—a silent promise born
of blood, bullets, utmost dedication and honour. When a soldier loses a part of his body, his
health, his ease of life for the sake of the nation's security, then the
disability pension given to him by the nation is not mercy—it is compensation.
That is honour, an embodiment of national gratitude. But the 2026-27 budget
proposal has raised questions about this honour. It has been proposed to make
the Armed Forces disability pension, which has been tax-free for 104 years,
taxable based on “how the person retired from service.” If a soldier is
"invalidated out," that is discharged from service due to disability,
the tax exemption will remain in effect.
But if he continues to serve despite the same disability and retires on
superannuation, his disability pension will now be taxable. This is not just a
financial decision. It is a question of equality, respect and military ethics.
What is a disability pension?
Disability pension is divided into two parts—
1. Service Element -
Equivalent to the normal retiring pension (50% of the last drawn reckonable
emoluments). If the individual has not completed the required qualifying
service for a full pension, a proportionate reduction is applied. It is
calculated based on the rank and length of service rendered.
2. Disability
Element - Calculated as 30% of the last drawn reckonable emoluments for 100%
disability. If the disability is less than 100%, but not less than 20%, this
element is reduced proportionally. For disabilities assessed at less than 20%,
no disability element is paid. The disability must be assessed as
attributable to or aggravated by military service.
Disability benefits are determined by a military medical
board based on the injury, illness, or permanent physical impairment a soldier
sustained during service and approved by the Integrated Financial Adviser (IFA)
system within the Defence Accounts Department (DAD), often working alongside
the Principal Controller of Defence Accounts (PCDA). This is not a general
retirement benefit; it is compensation for the specific risks of military
service. If a
soldier is injured by bullets while conducting a counter-terrorism operation in
Kashmir valley or in the jungles of North East or in the firing and shelling in
Line of Control or suffers permanent damage due to severe frostbite, chilblains, hypothermia,
snow blindness, and pulmonary embolism in the -40 degree temperatures of
Siachen, that injury is not his personal
misfortune—it is the price he paid for the security of the nation.
Proposed division:
Same pain, different treatment. Let's imagine—two soldiers are injured in the
same operation. Both
are assessed with 50% permanent disability. The first soldier is declared
"invalided out" by the military medical board. The second soldier,
due to the needs of the unit and his sense of duty and devotion, continues to
serve with a medical category downgrade.
The first's disability pension is tax-free. The second's is taxable.
The question arises—did the nature of the disability
change? Was the second soldier's injury less painful? Was his service less
risky? This
division is not voluntary. Whether or not to be “invalidated out” is an
administrative decision. Tax
policy based on factors beyond the military's control creates unequal treatment
between individuals of the same class.
This
raises questions about the principle of equality in the Constitution.
Let us see various examples regarding this issue.
Example 1: Punishment for Perseverance
An officer suffers a serious knee or spine injury during an
operation in Kashmir. He gets 40% disability and placed under low medical
category. However, he doesn’t leave the
service. He is posted in peace station like training centre. He shares his experience with
new recruits, forged them from raw material to die hard warriors ready to
unleased fury to the enemies of the country. But his promotion may be stopped due to a
medical category downgrade. He suffers a decline in his career. After retirement—now he is
told: “You have to pay taxes.”
What is this called? A reward for perseverance or a
punishment for perseverance?
Example 2: War veterans
Many war veterans from the 1965 or 1971 wars are now 75–85
years old. They
are dependent on a limited pension. There is no source of additional income. If
there is a 20–30% tax cut, it is not just a financial loss—it is a question of
medicine, treatment, daily life.
Long-term
untreated PTSD(Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder) - often historically dismissed
as "shell shock" or "weak character"- has forced
generations of veterans to endure nightmares, anxiety, and severe mental
distress without proper care . Will the nation take the burden off their
shoulders in old age? Don’t
they feel abandoned by the country and very government and the people they
fought for.
Example 3: Psychological impact
Suppose a young officer is injured in an operation. The
medical board places him on limited duty. Now if he knows that continuing in
service will result in future tax liability, but if he is immediately
“invalided out” the tax exemption will remain—what does he choose? This
policy may inadvertently encourage retirement rather than continued service.
Such a message is dangerous in a military structure.
Economic Rationale vs. Moral Value
The defence budget is colossal. Pension spending is also
significant. The government wants to reduce revenue spending to increase
capital spending. But the question is—how much will be saved by taxing
disability pensions, and what will be the impact on institutional morale in
return? If the total defence budget is in the hundreds of millions of rupees,
the savings from taxing a few thousand disabled soldiers may only be symbolic.
Historical context: 104 years of tradition
Disability pensions have been tax-free since 1922. This was
not a temporary exemption—it was an institutional recognition that a soldier's
disability was the responsibility of the nation. To suddenly change such a long-established
tradition is not just an administrative reform—it is an invasion of trust.
Breaking the tacit agreement between the military and the nation has
repercussions for future generations.
Career Downgrade: Double Injury
A medical category downgrade affects most soldiers'
promotions, commands, and assignments.
They
have already paid the price of their careers. Now taxing pensions means—first a
loss of career, now a loss of income. It is a double punishment.
Social Message
The younger generation watches how the nation treats its
wounded soldiers. If the policy is such that only soldiers who serve with
disabilities are punished, what message will it send to youth of the country? “It is
wise to get out as quickly as possible after being injured. Is that the message
we want to send?”
Constitutional Perspective
Treating two people with the same disability differently
based solely on the nature of their retirement does not seem to be a rational
classification. The
nature of disability pension is compensatory, not a normal retirement benefit.
Taxing compensation is like taxing pain.
An emotional but realistic question
Would any parents, while sending their son or daughter to Indian
Armed Forces which is forever at war, think, "If they serve even after
getting injured, they will have to pay taxes in the future"? The nation should show
sensitivity in its policies. The body of a soldier is the nation's protective armour.
A tear in that Armour is not a taxable item.
Conclusion:
Why should this
proposal be withdrawn?
1. Violation of the principle of equality – same
disability, different treatment.
2. Persistence penalty – tax burden on those who continue
to serve.
3. Injustice to veteran soldiers – further reduction in
life dependent on limited income.
4. Impact on morale – potential to undermine service
continuity.
5. Devaluation of historical tradition – End of 104 years
of tax-free practice.
6. Economic gain negligible, symbolic loss large – message
more serious than savings.
Nation-building is not just the arithmetic of budgets; it
is the geometry of trust. Disability pension tax exemption is not a privilege -
it is a formal expression of national gratitude. If tax reform is necessary, then broad
structural reforms can be made. But starting reform by taxing wounded soldiers
is a morally weak and preposterous decision. The nation should look upon its wounded heroes
not as a pillar of reckoning, but as a throne of honour.
Therefore, this proposal should not just be reconsidered,
but withdrawn in its entirety.
History
judges a nation by how it treats its wounded soldiers. The nation must choose
the right side in this historic moment -the side of honour, the side of
equality and the side of gratitude.
#KeepDisabilityPensionTaxFree
ReplyDelete#KeepDisabilityPensionTaxFree
ReplyDelete#keepDisabilty pension tax free
ReplyDeleteThis proposal raises serious concerns of equity and morale. Disability pension is compensatory in nature, linked to service related sacrifice, not a routine retirement benefit. Taxing those who continued to serve despite disability, while exempting others with the same assessed disability, creates an avoidable disparity. The financial gain may be modest, but the institutional and symbolic cost could be significant. A reconsideration that preserves fairness, morale, and long-standing tradition would be in the larger national interest.
ReplyDeleteDisability pension is the least a nation can do for a soldier who has sworn allegiance to the country with his life .
ReplyDelete