Addressing a two-decade-old demand, and defusing an issue that could have blown up ahead of the Assembly elections, the M K Stalin government Saturday announced the implementation of the Tamil Nadu Assured Pension Scheme (TAPS).The scheme entitles state government employees to an assured pension equal to 50% of their last drawn basic pay, with periodic dearness allowance increases on par with serving government employees. The announcement, made through an official government release, was framed as a continuation of the benefits available under the Old Pension System (OPS), with the state retaining elements of contributory funding to contain long-term fiscal risks.AdvertisementIssuing the order, Chief Minister Stalin described government employees and teachers as “the wheels of the vehicle of governance”, carrying welfare schemes to the farthest margins of society. TAPS was a continuation of what his government describes as “the Dravidian model” of governance, he added.ALSO READ | Beyond fiscal math, why Congress data head’s post on Tamil Nadu debt has touched a political nerveThe demandUnder a Joint Action Council of the Tamil Nadu Teachers’ Organisations and Government Employees’ Organisations (JACTO-GEO), state government employees have been seeking the scrapping of the Contributory Pension Scheme (CPS) and restoration of the OPS.In recent days, the employee unions have been increasing pressure on the government and, some weeks ago, several federations announced hunger strikes and protests, claiming that decades of “uncertainty” over retirement benefits had left employees “retiring in the dark”, unsure of their post-service income.AdvertisementOn December 11, several more unions aligned with broader agitations under the JACTO-GEO banner.The ruling DMK was also under pressure as, in its manifesto for the 2021 Assembly elections, it had said that it would implement the OPS. In several state polls since, the promise to bring back the OPS has proved decisive in results.Initially, in the wake of the renewed demands, the DMK government seemed to be taking a hard line. On December 10, Chief Secretary N Muruganandam warned employees of pay cuts and announced measures to ensure compulsory attendance, with district collectors told to monitor turnout and deny leave except for medical reasons.Against that backdrop, Saturday’s TAPS announcement – just ahead of an indefinite statewide strike to begin from January 6 – appears to have decisively shifted the ground. By offering a guaranteed pension structure that closely mirrors the old system’s core benefits, the Stalin government has effectively neutralised the immediate trigger for mass action, buying both political calm and administrative continuity.The new schemeUnder TAPS, employees will contribute 10% of their basic pay to the pension fund, with the Tamil Nadu government bearing the remaining amount to guarantee an assured pension. Plus, pensioners will receive dearness allowance hikes twice a year, mirroring those granted to serving employees.In the event of a pensioner’s death, 60% of the pension will be paid as family pension to the nominated beneficiary.Employees retiring without completing the qualifying service period will also be eligible for a certain minimum pension, while those who joined service under the Contributory Pension Scheme but retired in the intervening years without pension will receive a “special compassionate pension”.Gratuity benefits have been capped at Rs 25 lakh, payable either at retirement or in the event of death during service, depending on the length of tenure.Calculated fiscal riskThe government estimates that the new scheme will require an immediate infusion of Rs 13,000 crore into the pension fund, with an annual contribution of around Rs 11,000 crore thereafter – an amount that is expected to rise each year in line with salary increases.The decision was preceded by months of internal deliberations. A high-level committee headed by Additional Chief Secretary Kagan Deep Singh Bedi was constituted to examine pension options and submit recommendations. Its report was studied in detail, followed by consultations involving the Finance Minister, the Chief Secretary, the Finance Secretary, and ministers overseeing public works and school education.Officials privately concede that the fiscal commitment is substantial, especially at a time when the state has repeatedly flagged declining tax devolution from the Union government, GST-related revenue compression, and rising welfare expenditure. Yet the political cost of ignoring employee sentiment was judged to be higher.Widening benefitsSince 2021, the government has steadily expanded employee welfare measures – raising dearness allowance in line with the Centre after the Covid-19 freeze, restoring ‘earned leave surrender’ from October 2025, increasing housing advances to Rs 50 lakh, enhancing education and marriage advances, and boosting gratuity ceilings. Pensioners’ medical insurance has been raised to Rs 10 lakh, and the Pongal gift increased from Rs 500 to Rs 1,000. Maternity leave for women employees now extends to 12 months.TAPS, officials argue, completes that arc by addressing the most emotive issue of all: post-retirement security.most readElectoral undertonesWith Assembly elections on the horizon, the move also carries unmistakable political undertones. Numbering around nine lakh, not counting their families, government employees and teachers form a substantial and influential constituency. A prolonged strike or visible confrontation could have fed into an Opposition campaign portraying the government as insensitive to its own workforce.The framing of TAPS reinforces the image courted by the ruling DMK of being responsive yet fiscally responsible. DMK allies such as the CPI(M), CPI and PMK founder S Ramadoss welcomed the move.Union leaders were more cautious in their reaction to the announcement, saying they would study the fine print before deciding their course of action.