When the Government of India replaced the Old Pension Scheme (OPS) with the National Pension System (NPS) in 2004, the goal was fiscal sustainability. By linking pensions to market performance, the state sought to ease long-term financial pressure. Two decades on, the consequences are clear, especially for the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPFs). These personnel guard borders, combat insurgency and maintain internal security under extreme conditions. Their risks mirror those of the military, but their retirement security does not.This raises a simple question: has the reform been fair?How we got hereIndia’s pension framework dates to colonial times. The Indian Pensions Act of 1871 formalised pension rights, and post-Independence, the OPS guaranteed 50% of the last drawn salary for life, indexed to inflation.Also read: Govt Pushes Controversial CAPF Bill in Lok Sabha Today, Seeks Relaxation of Two-Day RuleThat system ensured certainty. The NPS, introduced in 2004, replaced it with a contributory model where final payouts depend on market returns. While fiscally prudent, it shifted risk from the state to the individual.The Unified Pension Scheme (UPS), launched in 2025, attempts a middle path. Yet, for thousands of CAPF personnel, significant gaps remain.However, while armed forces personnel continue under OPS, with assured lifelong pensions, CAPF personnel recruited after January 1, 2004, remain under NPS and are exposed to market volatility.On April 9, 2026, families of CAPF personnel highlighted this disparity at Raj Ghat, Delhi, stressing that, unlike OPS, their pensions remain uncertain and market dependent. Their demand was straightforward: equal risk should mean equal security.President Draupadi Murmu gave assent to the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF) (General Administration) Bill, 2026, on April 9.Groups of retired CAPF and family members of personnel in service protested against the bill, claiming it adversely affects their rights and services. pic.twitter.com/Ocik7lji7p— The Wire (@thewire_in) April 17, 2026Why NPS falls short for CAPFsUnder NPS, pensions depend on contributions, market performance and annuity rates. There is no guaranteed minimum. For CAPF personnel, this creates real insecurity. Many retire early, often in their 40s or early 50s, after decades in high-risk postings.With rising life expectancy and healthcare costs, they face decades without an assured income. Such demanding service conditions, coupled with disrupted family lives, make a stable, inflation-linked pension essential, not optional.The Unified Pension System or UPS offers a 50% assured pension, but only after 25 years of service. Many CAPF personnel do not complete this tenure, limiting its benefit. For those who do not serve over this length of tenure, continued uncertainty is difficult to justify, given that the nature of their service is no less demanding.The case for correction is based on certain principles that apply to these services and personnel, namely:Parity: Similar duties and risks should mean similar post-retirement security.Service conditions: CAPF roles are physically demanding and hazardous, warranting a dependable pension.Morale: Uncertainty undermines confidence among both serving personnel and retirees.Fiscal reality: Compared to large-scale welfare spending, restoring pension security for CAPFs would be a modest and targeted commitment to those in uniform.The way forwardAcross countries such as the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia, personnel in policing and border security receive defined-benefit pensions, often with earlier retirement provisions. India’s CAPFs, given their critical role, deserve comparable assurance.A balanced solution is possible:Restore OPS for CAPF personnel to ensure parity with the armed forces; orStrengthen UPS by reducing the qualifying service period, enhancing minimum pensions, and ensuring full inflation protection.The objective is not the label of the scheme, but the certainty it provides.A pension is not a favour; it is deferred compensation for years of service. CAPF personnel serve in difficult, often invisible roles, bearing risks that sustain national stability. Ensuring their post-retirement security is not just sound policy; it is a moral obligation.India’s pension reforms aimed at sustainability, but in doing so, they have left CAPF personnel at a disadvantage. Fairness, practicality, and national responsibility point in one direction: restore a stable, dignified pension framework for those who safeguard the nation.The question is no longer whether this can be done, but whether it can be delayed any longer.Jagjeet Singh Bhalla is a retired deputy inspector general from the Border Security Force and an alumnus of the Defence Services Staff College, Wellington. He is a recipient of the Police Medal for Gallantry and the Meritorious Service Medal.