The Pension That Was Promised — And Never Paid

For over two decades, India’s bank retirees have been waiting for a pension revision agreed to in writing, supported by regulation, and upheld in principle — yet systematically denied in practice. Here is the story of M.C. Singla vs. Union of India, and why it matters to every bank retiree in the country.

18+ Years

1993

Retirees Awaiting Justice

In Courts

When It Was Promised

What Is This Case About?

If you are a retired bank employee and your pension today is what it was when you retired — or close to it — this case is about you. The M.C. Singla case, formally Civil Appeal No. 7993/2023 before the Supreme Court of India, is the legal battle being fought on behalf of approximately 7.8 lakh retired employees of public sector banks who have been denied the revision — or updation — of their basic pension.

  • Pension Regulations 1995, Regulation 35(1) — the law that provides for updation of basic and additional pension. Its existence has been denied, misrepresented, and buried for decades.
  • 1993 Bipartite Settlement, Clause 12 — IBA formally agreed to frame rules for pension updation. That agreement was signed and never honoured.
  • What “updation” means — Not a bonus. Not ex-gratia. A proportionate revision of the basic pension at each wage settlement, exactly as Central Government and RBI retirees receive.
  • What has been given instead — A one-time ex-gratia in 2022. No Dearness Relief on basic pension for many categories. No structural revision whatsoever.
  • Who is responsible — The Finance Ministry (which owns the banks), IBA (which negotiates on their behalf), and successive governments that chose to look away.

From Promise to Supreme Court

The story begins not in a courtroom but at a table in 1993. Under the 7th Bipartite Settlement, bank employees were offered a pension scheme in place of provident fund. The fund was built from contributions by both employees and banks. Clause 12 of the Settlement dated 29 October 1993 promised that rules would be framed for the updation of pension through negotiated settlement.

That promise was formalised in the Bank Employees’ Pension Regulations, 1995, gazetted by the Government of India. Regulation 35(1) contains the updation provision. For those who opted into the pension scheme — many surrendering their provident fund balances — this was the foundational assurance on which they built their retirement plans.

Chronological Story
1993
7th Bipartite Settlement — Pension scheme launched; Clause 12 promises updation framework.
1995
Pension Regulations gazetted — Regulation 35(1) provides for updation
2008
M.C. Singla and 8 PNB retirees file writ petition in Punjab & Haryana HC.
2015
High Court dismisses — Clause 12 creates no vested right, only an obligation to negotiate.
2016
Supreme Court admits appeal — SLP(C) 5561/2016. The long wait in the highest court begins.
Mar 2024
12th Bipartite Settlement — ex-gratia only. IBA refuses updation, citing “sub-judice”.
Apr 2026
New SC bench. Court signals prospective updation from 2026. Judgment expected before summer vacation.

Where Things Stand Today — April 30, 2026

On 29th April 2026, the case was taken up by a new Supreme Court bench — Justice Sanjiv Khanna and Justice Dipankar Datta — in Court No. 2. IBA submitted a fresh actuarial report claiming a one-time burden of ₹95,000 crore if updation is allowed retrospectively from 1995. The petitioners’ counsel, Dr. Manish Singhvi, pressed the RBI pension updation precedent and the legitimate expectation created by the 1995 Regulations.

The bench’s signal was significant: it asked IBA to file a year-wise cost break-up specifically for prospective updation from 2026, indicating it is not inclined to grant retrospective updation. IBA must file these figures by 4th May 2026, with final arguments on 6th May 2026. The bench indicated judgment will come before the court’s summer vacation.

Current Bench

Justice Sanjiv Khanna & Justice Dipankar Datta

Court Signal

Prospective updation from 2026 — not retrospective from 1995

IBA Deadline

File prospective cost calculations by 4 May 2026

Next Hearing

6 May 2026 — Final submissions

Judgment
Expected before Supreme Court summer vacation

What Should Retirees Expect?
Based on the court’s signals, the most likely outcome is an order for prospective pension updation — meaning the basic pension of eligible retirees will be revised going forward from 2026 or thereabouts. Retrospective arrears from 1995 appear unlikely given the bench’s indications.
Even a prospective updation would be a landmark. It would establish in law what has been denied in practice for three decades: that bank retirees have a right, not a privilege, to have their pension revised in line with successive wage settlements — and it would end the cynical use of litigation as a tool of indefinite delay.
Watch the May 6 hearing and the final judgment.
Share this post with fellow retirees who may not be aware of the case.

Sources: Supreme Court daily cause list · AIBPARC flash circular 29/04/2026 · AIBRF · Bank Pensioner Group records This article is for informational purposes only. Nothing herein constitutes legal advice