Suspense Manual — A Practical Guide
Chapter-wise consolidated notes on Suspense and Remittance Heads under Major Head 8658 and allied accounts. Covers the operation, booking, and clearance of every intermediary head used in departmentalised accounting offices — with worked examples and transfer entries.
Why Suspense Heads Exist
All suspense items in government accounts live under Major Head 8658 — Suspense Accounts, in the "L — Suspense and Miscellaneous" section of the List of Major and Minor Heads of Account.
Core Concepts of Government Accounts
- 💵Cash basis: Government accounts are kept on cash basis. Most transactions flow through accredited Public Sector Banks; RBI is the principal banker, and other authorised banks act as its agents.
- ⚖️Debit / credit usage: In normal heads, debit = expenditure and credit = receipt. Under intermediary heads (Cheques & Bills, PSB Suspense, Deposits with RBI) debit and credit follow double-entry mechanics rather than income/expenditure semantics.
- 🪞Mirror image with banks: A debit to PSB Suspense means PSBs owe the government; a credit means the government owes PSBs. The same logic applies to Deposits with RBI.
The Three Intermediary Heads
Records cheques drawn by PAOs (sub-head 102) and by departmental Cheque Drawing DDOs (sub-head 103). Credited when cheques are delivered; cleared when paid scrolls return from the bank.
Tracks transactions handled by Public Sector Banks pending their settlement with RBI Nagpur. Debit = receipts collected; Credit = payments made.
The final cash-balance head. All government receipts ultimately come here as debit, and all payments as credit. Reflected in Government's cash balance with RBI.
The Minus-Entry Mechanism — A Special Feature
The head 'Cheques and Bills' as well as 'Suspense' and 'Remittance' heads are intermediary accounting devices for initial record of transactions which are to be cleared / withdrawn in due course. Clearance happens not by reverse positive entries, but by negative entries:
Parts & Divisions of Government Accounts
All tax revenues (income tax, central excise, customs, land revenue), all non-tax revenues (Railways, Posts, Transport, etc.), all loans raised by Government (internal & external debt), and all loan repayments & interest. All government expenditure — including debt repayment and release of loans to States/UTs — is debited here.
An imprest at the disposal of the President for unforeseen expenditure pending parliamentary authorisation. Used for natural-calamity relief or new policy decisions taken before Parliament approves. Recouped from the Consolidated Fund after Parliament votes the bill.
All public money other than what goes to the Consolidated Fund. Receipts & disbursements here are not subject to vote by Parliament. Includes Savings Certificates, GPF, PPF, Security Deposits, Earnest Money — plus all suspense and remittance heads. Government acts as banker / trustee.
Consolidated Fund — Three Sub-divisions
| Section | Coverage | Major Head Codes |
|---|---|---|
| (a) Revenue | Revenue Receipts (Tax & Non-Tax) and Revenue Expenditure | 0020 – 1606 & 2011 – 3606 |
| (b) Capital | Capital Receipts & Capital Expenditure | 4000 & 4046 – 5475 |
| (c) Public Debt | Public Debt and Loans & Advances | 6001 – 7999 |
Being an imprest, it is accounted for under a single major head — 8000.
Public Account — Six Sub-divisions
- Small Savings, Provident Funds etc. — Major Head Codes 8001 – 8013.
- Reserve Funds — Major Head Codes 8115 – 8235.
- Deposits and Advances — Major Head Codes 8336 – 8554.
- Suspense and Miscellaneous — Major Head Codes 8656 – 8680 ★ this manual
- Remittances — Major Head Codes 8781 – 8797.
- Cash Balance — Major Head Code 8999.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Major head for suspense | 8658 — under "L — Suspense and Miscellaneous" |
| Why exist | Park transactions awaiting nature/details; cleared on receipt of info |
| Clearing mechanism | Minus debit / minus credit — not reverse positive entries |
| Government accounting basis | Cash basis; RBI is principal banker; PSBs are RBI's agents |
| 3 intermediary heads | 8670 Cheques & Bills · 8658-108 PSB Suspense · 8675-101 Deposits with RBI |
| 3 funds of govt accounts | Consolidated Fund · Contingency Fund · Public Account |
| Contingency Fund code | Single major head 8000 — President's imprest |
| Public Account sub-divisions | 6: Small Savings/PF · Reserve Funds · Deposits/Advances · Suspense/Misc · Remittances · Cash Balance |
| Suspense head range | 8656 – 8680 |
| Final cash-balance head | 8999 — Cash Balance |
Cheques & Bills — Major Head 8670
Three Categories of Cheques
Endorsable / transferable. Issued in favour of private parties — suppliers, contractors, refund payees. Most common variety.
"Not Transferable" written across face. Issued for personal claims of Govt servants — salary, TA, GPF advance — payable only to the named payee.
"Govt Account — Not payable in Cash" stamped on face. Used to settle inter-departmental dues — credited directly to the receiving department's account at the bank.
Two Sub-heads under 8670
| Sub-head | Who draws cheques? | Pay-and-accounts office? |
|---|---|---|
| 102 — PAO Cheques | The PAO itself, after passing the bill | PAO maintains accounts; cheque drawn by PAO |
| 103 — Departmental Cheques | A Cheque-Drawing DDO (CDDO) authorised by Government | DDO draws cheque and sends paid vouchers to PAO at month-end |
From Bill to Encashment — The Full Journey
Bill received at PAO
DDO of department forwards bill (Pay Bill, Contingent Bill, Refund Voucher, etc.) along with supporting documents.
Pre-check & passing
PAO checks budget availability, sanction, calculations. Bill is passed for payment.
Cheque drawn & delivered
Cheque written, signed by PAO, delivered to payee. Final head debited; 8670-102 credited.
Payee presents at bank
Payee deposits cheque at his own bank or at the accredited bank counter.
Bank reports — paid scroll
Accredited PSB sends paid cheque scroll + paid cheques to PAO daily.
Clearance entry passed
On receipt of scroll: PAO passes minus-credit to 8670-102 against credit to 8658-108 PSB Suspense. The cheque is now off the liability list.
Focal Point Branch System
Each accredited bank designates a Focal Point Branch in every PAO's jurisdiction. All paying branches of that bank route their daily scrolls to the Focal Point, which then aggregates and sends a consolidated daily main scroll to the PAO. This reduces reconciliation effort sharply.
- 🏦One bank, one focal branch, one daily scroll per PAO — even if hundreds of branches paid government cheques that day.
- 📅Focal Point Branch consolidates & forwards on the same day to the dealing PAO.
- 📨Focal Point also sends a copy of the main scroll to the Link Cell at RBI Nagpur via its own controlling office for the inter-bank settlement.
Transfer Entries — Booking & Clearance
Cheque Validity & Cancellation
- ⏳Validity period: A government cheque is valid for three months from the date of issue. Beyond this, it becomes "time-barred" and the bank must not pay it.
- 🚫If not encashed within three months: Cheque lapses. PAO writes back the entry by minus-debit to the original final head and minus-credit to 8670. The cheque can be revalidated or freshly issued on a written request from the payee.
- 📝Cancellation before encashment: If the payee returns the cheque or it is lost/stolen, a "Stop Payment" advice goes to the bank; on confirmation, the entry is reversed.
Cheques drawn but unpaid at the close of the financial year remain in the books as a credit balance under 8670. They are not written back automatically — they will clear when the scroll arrives or when the cheque time-expires.
Key Registers & CAM Forms
| Form | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CAM-10 | Cheque issue register at PAO |
| CAM-11 | Daily abstract of cheques issued (for accounts) |
| CAM-15 | Register of paid cheques (after scroll matching) |
| CAM-17 | Register of cheques returned by bank — unpaid |
| CAM-21 | Register of cancelled / time-expired cheques |
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Major head | 8670 — Cheques and Bills |
| Sub-head 102 | PAO Cheques — drawn by Pay & Accounts Officer |
| Sub-head 103 | Departmental Cheques — drawn by Cheque-Drawing DDO |
| Cheque categories | Negotiable · Non-Transferable · Govt Account |
| Validity | 3 months from date of issue |
| Original entry | Dr Final Head / Cr 8670-102 |
| Clearance entry | (–) Cr 8670-102 / Cr 8658-108 PSB Suspense |
| Focal Point Branch | One per bank per PAO — sends consolidated daily scroll |
| Year-end treatment | Unpaid cheques remain in books as credit under 8670 |
| Cheque issue register | CAM-10 |
PSB Suspense — Why & How
Why PSB Suspense Exists
- ⏱️Cheques are paid locally by hundreds of PSB branches, but the cash settlement with Government's account happens centrally at RBI CAS Nagpur.
- 📨The branch reports to its Focal Point Branch, which advises its Head Office Link Cell, which finally advises Nagpur. By then 3–7 days have elapsed.
- 🪣PSB Suspense is the bucket that holds the value of those daily transactions until Nagpur effects the formal book settlement.
Daily Scroll & Settlement Flow
Bank branch acts
Receives a challan (e.g. tax payment) or pays a cheque drawn by PAO.
Branch → Focal Point
Sends day's scrolls + challans / paid cheques to its Focal Point Branch.
Focal Point → PAO & Link Cell
Focal Point sends the consolidated daily main scroll + originals to the PAO; copy to its bank's Link Cell at Nagpur.
Link Cell → CAS Nagpur
Link Cell of the PSB submits a Daily Memorandum of Settlement (DMS) to Central Accounts Section, RBI Nagpur.
CAS Nagpur effects book settlement
RBI Nagpur debits / credits the Government's account & sends Date-wise Monthly Statement (DMS) to PAO showing settled items.
PAO clears PSB Suspense
On receipt of settled DMS, PAO clears 8658-108 PSB Suspense by minus entries against 8675-101 Deposits with RBI.
Booking & Clearance Entries
Case A — Receipt scroll (challans collected by bank)
[2] On settlement by CAS Nagpur (per DMS) (–) Dr. 8658 — 108 PSB Suspense to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil Dr.
Case B — Payment scroll (cheques paid by bank)
[2] On settlement by CAS Nagpur (–) Cr. 8658 — 108 PSB Suspense to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil Cr.
DMS, Reconciliation & Deadlines
Key DMS Deadlines
- By 3rd of the following month — Link Cell sends the consolidated monthly DMS to CAS Nagpur.
- By 7th of the following month — CAS Nagpur sends the verified Date-wise Monthly Statement to each PAO.
- PAO must verify and clear PSB Suspense for the month before submitting monthly accounts to the Principal Accounts Office.
Annexures of the DMS
- Annexure I — Statement of items settled (matched between Link Cell & CAS).
- Annexure IV — Items reported by Link Cell but not settled (mostly mis-classifications).
- Annexure V — Items settled by CAS Nagpur but not reported by Link Cell.
Persistent balances in Annexure IV & V indicate wrong account head quoted in challans, duplicate booking by the bank, or scroll not received by PAO. PAO must take these up with the Focal Point Branch each month.
CBEC Procedure — Customs & Excise Refunds
The Central Board of Excise & Customs (now CBIC) follows the regular procedure but with one peculiarity for refunds of duty: the refund cheque is issued by the Assistant / Deputy Commissioner (Cheque-drawing officer), encashed by the assessee, and PSB Suspense is cleared the same way as for any departmental cheque. Refunds are classified under the deduct-receipt head of the relevant duty (Customs / Central Excise / Service Tax) rather than as a separate expenditure head.
CBDT Procedure — Income-Tax Refund Orders (ITROs)
The Assessing Officer issues a two-foil ITRO — one acts as the refund order itself and is encashable at any accredited bank branch like a cheque. No separate refund advice is needed.
Assessing Officer issues a normal refund advice + cheque. The cheque is drawn by ZAO (Zonal Accounts Officer) using the "Receipts awaiting transfer to other minor heads" minor head under 0020/0021 until clearance.
Because in income-tax, refunds are deductions from gross collections of the same year. The intermediate minor head provides the link until the deduction is finally adjusted against the relevant tax sub-head.
Deposits with Reserve Bank — The Final Landing
| Sub-head | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 8675 — 101 | Central-Civil (general govt receipts/payments) |
| 8675 — 102 | Railways |
| 8675 — 103 | Defence |
| 8675 — 104 | Posts |
| 8675 — 105 | Telecommunications |
Each is a self-accounting Department with its own cash balance with RBI. They settle their own PSB Suspense → Deposits with RBI cycle. Inter-departmental dues are settled later through Adjustment Accounts (Ch 9) or PAO Suspense.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Head & minor head | 8658 — 108 PSB Suspense |
| Why it exists | Time-lag between PSB action & RBI Nagpur book settlement |
| Daily flow | Branch → Focal Point → Link Cell → CAS Nagpur |
| Settlement document | Date-wise Monthly Statement (DMS) by CAS Nagpur |
| DMS deadline (Link Cell) | 3rd of following month |
| DMS deadline (CAS) | 7th of following month |
| Annexure IV | Reported by Link Cell, NOT settled by CAS |
| Annexure V | Settled by CAS, NOT reported by Link Cell |
| ITRO ≤ ₹1,000 | Two-foil order, directly encashable |
| ITRO > ₹1,000 | Cheque routed through "Receipts awaiting transfer" minor head |
| Final landing | 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil |
Reserve Bank Suspense — CAO (8658-110)
Why Book Adjustment, Not Cheques
- 🏛️Both the Centre and every State maintain their cash balance with the Reserve Bank. A payment by Centre to State, or a receipt by Centre from State, can be effected entirely by debit / credit between the two cash-balance accounts at RBI Nagpur — no physical money moves.
- 📃The originating PAO advises RBI Nagpur through an RB Advice. CAS Nagpur acts on it and reports the settlement back via the Statement of Central Transactions (SCT) / DMS.
- ⏱️Until the SCT comes back, the originating PAO carries the transaction under 8658-110.
Outflow — Grants & Loans from Centre to States
The most common usage of 8658-110 is for release of grants-in-aid (under 3601) and loans (under 7601) to State Governments. The originating PAO (usually under the Department concerned) instructs CAS Nagpur to debit the Centre's account and credit the State's.
[2] When CAS Nagpur effects settlement (per SCT) (–) Cr. 8658 — 110 RB Suspense — CAO to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil Cr.
Same procedure — only the final head changes to 7601 — Loans and Advances to State Governments.
Inflow — Repayments, Interest from States to Centre
The reverse flow — when a State pays back a loan instalment or interest to the Centre — uses the same 8658-110 head but in mirror direction.
[2] On settlement by CAS Nagpur (–) Dr. 8658 — 110 RB Suspense — CAO to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil Dr.
Interest on Centre-to-State loans is credited under 0049 — Interest Receipts. The intermediate head is again 8658-110 RB Suspense — CAO.
Exceptions — J&K, Sikkim & the UTs
| Entity | How transactions are settled |
|---|---|
| Jammu & Kashmir | J&K does not bank with RBI. Settlement is through cheques drawn on accredited bank, NOT book adjustment. PSB Suspense (108) is used, not 110. |
| Sikkim (historically) | Similar to J&K — cheque-based settlement. |
| Union Territories (without legislature) | UTs are part of the Central Government accounts. No inter-government settlement needed — direct debit / credit to final heads. |
| UTs with legislature (Delhi, Puducherry) | Have separate Consolidated Funds & bank with RBI. 8658-110 applies just as for full States. |
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Head & minor head | 8658 — 110 RB Suspense — Central Accounts Office |
| Used for | Centre ↔ State transactions settled by book adjustment at RBI CAS Nagpur |
| Originating advice | RB Advice from PAO to CAS Nagpur |
| Settlement statement | Statement of Central Transactions (SCT) / DMS |
| Grants to States — head | 3601 |
| Loans to States — head | 7601 |
| Interest receipts — head | 0049 |
| J&K exception | Cheque route via 8658-108, NOT 110 |
| UTs without legislature | Part of Central Govt accounts — no 110 needed |
| 108 vs 110 | 108 = bank/cheque path · 110 = book adjustment path |
PAO Suspense — Settling Inter-Department Dues
The Mechanic — Two Sides of the Same Coin
Every inter-PAO transaction has two halves:
- 📤Outward claim — PAO-A makes the payment and raises a claim on PAO-B. A debits 8658-101 PAO Suspense — PAO-B.
- 📥Inward claim — PAO-B accepts the claim, debits the appropriate final head, and credits 8658-101 PAO Suspense — PAO-A. Both PAOs then route an RB Advice and CAS Nagpur effects the cash settlement.
The minor head 101 is sub-divided by counter-party PAO — separate broadsheets are maintained for each PAO with which transactions arise. This is how A's "Suspense with PAO-B" reconciles against B's "Suspense with PAO-A".
Worked Example — Punjab IAS Officer on Deputation
An IAS officer of Punjab cadre is on central deputation to Department of Personnel & Training (DoPT), Delhi. His pay is drawn by DoPT's PAO. From it, two recoveries are made:
| Item | Amount | Belongs to |
|---|---|---|
| Income-tax + license fee recoveries | ₹ 1,420 | Centre — direct credit, no PAO Suspense |
| GPF advance recovery | ₹ 5,000 | Punjab — to be remitted via PAO Suspense |
[2] PAO-DoPT raises outward claim on Punjab AG Dr. 8658 — 101 PAO Suspense — Punjab AG (₹ 5,000) to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI Cr.
[3] At Punjab AG, on accepting the claim Dr. Final head (GPF of officer) to 8658 — 101 PAO Suspense — DoPT PAO Cr.
Exceptions — When NOT to Use PAO Suspense
- Income tax recovered from any government servant → credited directly to 0020 / 0021 Taxes on Income — no PAO Suspense.
- Licence fee for government quarters → credited directly to the final head — no PAO Suspense.
- CGHS contributions → credited directly to the relevant CGHS receipt head.
- PLI premia recovered from defence / postal / railway personnel → routed through the Director PLI, Calcutta via PAO Suspense (101). Different operating PAOs, so this is by exception still on Suspense.
Outward Claims — CAM Forms 53 / 54 / 55
| Form | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CAM-53 | Statement of Settlement Account — outward claim sent to other PAO |
| CAM-54 | Acceptance memo received from other PAO |
| CAM-55 | Settlement Account — inward claim received from another PAO |
| CAM-16 | Suspense Slip — generated at the level of the dealing sub-section |
| CAM-56 | Register of objections / un-accepted claims |
Inward Claims — Acceptance & Rejection
- ✅If accepted — pass entry [3] above. Send CAM-54 acceptance to originating PAO.
- ❌If rejected — return the inward claim with reasons (wrong classification, missing voucher, time-barred). The originating PAO must then re-book or write back the entry.
- ⏰Time limit — claims received should be accepted / rejected within two months. Beyond that, the originator can press the matter at senior level.
The Broadsheet — CAM-64
The broadsheet is the master register of outstanding items under PAO Suspense, kept counter-party-wise. Every month, the PAO checks: (a) opening balance, (b) plus current additions, (c) minus current clearances = closing balance. The closing balance feeds the monthly accounts. The most-watched metric is the age-wise analysis of un-cleared items — items above 6 months must be specifically reported to the CGA.
Items older than three years in PAO Suspense are treated as doubtful. After due investigation and CGA's permission, they may be transferred to 8680 — Misc. Government Account as write-off, with corresponding adjustment to the original final head.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Head & minor head | 8658 — 101 PAO Suspense |
| Used for | Inter-PAO settlements — one PAO pays / receives for another |
| Sub-divisions | By counter-party PAO — separate broadsheets |
| Outward claim | Originator debits 8658-101 — Other PAO |
| Inward claim acceptance | Receiver credits 8658-101 — Originator PAO |
| Outward statement form | CAM-53 |
| Acceptance memo form | CAM-54 |
| Inward statement form | CAM-55 |
| Broadsheet form | CAM-64 |
| Exceptions to PAO Suspense | Income tax · Licence fee · CGHS — direct credit to final head |
| Time limit to accept/reject | 2 months |
| Items > 3 years | Transfer to 8680 with CGA's permission |
Suspense Account (Civil) — 8658-102 & Allies
Sub-heads of 8658-102
| Sub-head | Description | Typical residence |
|---|---|---|
| Outstation Pay Bills | Pay bills of officers stationed outside HQ city, drawn at month-end | Central PAOs |
| Challans Suspense | Departmental challans for which classification is awaited | State AGs / PAOs |
| Vouchers Suspense | Vouchers received without supporting bills or with mis-classification | State AGs |
| Unclassified Suspense | Bank scrolls where account head is not legible / not quoted | All PAOs |
| Pay & Accounts Office Account | Mostly historic — covers transitional items pre-departmentalisation | Civil ministries |
Outstation Pay Bills — The March Twist
Pay bills of officers stationed outside the PAO city are drawn at month-end and the cheque is dispatched. For the March pay bill, the cheque is drawn on / before 31 March but is unlikely to be encashed in that financial year. The bill amount cannot be left out of March accounts (that would understate expenditure) — so the booking happens with Suspense Account (Civil) — Outstation Pay Bills as the contra credit, which is cleared in April once the cheque encashes.
[2] April — on encashment scroll (–) Cr. 8658 — 102 Suspense (Civil) — Outstation Pay Bills to 8658 — 108 PSB Suspense Cr.
Unclassified, Challans & Vouchers Suspense
- 📑Unclassified Suspense — bank scroll shows a receipt or payment but the account head is not given or is illegible. Booked here until the depositor / drawer is identified.
- 🧾Challans Suspense — used by State AGs when treasury challans are received without matching schedule from the department concerned. Cleared when schedule arrives.
- 📂Vouchers Suspense — used when departmental schedule shows a voucher but the physical voucher is missing, or vice versa. Cleared on reconciliation.
If after due investigation the depositor cannot be traced, the amount is transferred to 0070 — Other Administrative Services — Receipts under Civil Section (i.e. credited as revenue of the Centre) only with the approval of CGA. Reverse — payments traced to no claimant — go to 8680 Misc. Govt Account as write-off.
HBA / MCA Suspense — A Pre-Departmentalisation Relic
House Building Advance (HBA) and Motor Car Advance (MCA) were, prior to departmentalisation of accounts in 1976, administered centrally by the AG (Central). On departmentalisation, individual ministries' PAOs took over — but a large historical pool of outstanding advances remained on the AG's books. These were temporarily held under HBA / MCA Suspense (8658-102) until ministry-wise reconciliation could be done. The position is governed by Rule 38 of the Government Accounting Rules.
Fresh HBA / MCA advances are now booked under 7610 — Loans to Government Servants in the ministry's own PAO. The historical suspense balance is now small and is reconciled / written off as it surfaces.
Provident Fund Suspense — 8658-113
GPF subscriptions deducted from pay are credited to 8009 — State / Central Provident Fund. But sometimes the subscriber's account number / department is unknown or wrong — typically when a new joinee's GPF account hasn't been allotted yet, or on transfer between accounting circles. Such items go into PF Suspense (8658-113) until traced.
- 📋CAM-50 — register of PF Suspense items, kept account-number-wise.
- 🗓️Yearly review: at year-end, untraced items above 5 years are written off via 8680 — Misc. Government Account after CGA's sanction.
- 📤On allotment of GPF account → cleared by minus debit to 8658-113 against credit to 8009.
External Assistance Suspense & England-India Remittances
Used by the Controller of Aid Accounts & Audit (CAAA) for transactions of direct payment by World Bank / IDA / ADB / bilateral donors to suppliers. Cleared on receipt of donor's claim statement.
Historical head — for remittances between the High Commission, London and Indian PAOs. Now handled mostly through MEA & Missions Suspense (Ch 8). Survives for legacy items.
The Controller of Aid Accounts & Audit, under the Department of Economic Affairs, maintains loan-wise & project-wise broadsheets of external assistance. He intimates ministry PAOs of payments made directly by donors so they can book the project expenditure with corresponding external-aid receipt.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Head & minor head | 8658 — 102 Suspense Account (Civil) |
| Sub-heads | Outstation Pay Bills · Challans · Vouchers · Unclassified · PAO Account |
| March 31 bill mechanic | Dr final head / Cr 8658-102 — Outstation Pay Bills |
| HBA / MCA history | Pre-1976 AG balances; today fresh advances go under 7610 |
| HBA/MCA governing rule | Rule 38 of Government Accounting Rules |
| PF Suspense head | 8658 — 113 |
| PF Suspense register | CAM-50 |
| Untraced PF items | Write-off via 8680 after 5 years (CGA's sanction) |
| External Assistance head | 8658 — 114 — operated by CAAA |
| England-India Remittances | 8658 — 116 — historical, MEA mostly replaces |
Suspense Heads in the Public Works System
Scope — Four Ministries on Public Works Pattern
- CPWD — Central Public Works Department (Ministry of Housing & Urban Affairs).
- Irrigation Wing — In States; at Centre the residual head of MoWR.
- Civil Aviation, AIR / Doordarshan — Engineering works wings.
- Roads Wing — Ministry of Road Transport & Highways (NHAI uses a different SPV model now but Roads Wing is on this system).
Suspense Heads at Play in PW System
| Head | Function |
|---|---|
| 8658 — 107 | Cash Settlement Suspense (CSS) — for inter-division cash dealings between PW Divisions of same or different governments |
| 8658 — 129 | Material Purchase Settlement Suspense (MPSS) — for material received from DGS&D or other supply organisations awaiting payment |
| 8782 — 102 | PW Remittances — three sub-heads I, II, III(b) |
| 2059 — 799 | Stock Suspense — value of materials in PW Division godowns |
| 2059 — 799 / 4059 — 799 | Misc Works Advances — advances to contractors / staff pending recovery |
| 2059 — 799 | Workshop Suspense — for work-in-progress at departmental workshops |
The 799 "Suspense" Family — Inside Major Heads
Unique to PW accounting, certain suspense items live inside the works major head itself as minor head 799 — Suspense. These are not under 8658 but follow similar logic — they hold balances that will later become final expenditure / receipt of the same major head.
Value of materials purchased and held in Division godowns. Debited on purchase; cleared by credit on issue to works (or by sale).
Advances to contractors / staff against work to be done or expenditure incurred. Cleared on recovery / final adjustment.
Cost of jobs in progress at departmental workshops. Debited on actual cost; cleared when finished job is invoiced to the indenting Division.
Material Purchase Settlement Suspense (8658-129)
When a PW Division receives materials supplied through DGS&D or through a central supply organisation, the supply organisation has already paid the supplier. The Division now has a liability towards the supply organisation — recorded as credit under 8658-129 MPSS. The corresponding debit goes to the works expenditure / stock head as appropriate.
[2] On settlement through PW Remittances / CAS Nagpur (–) Cr. 8658 — 129 MPSS to 8782 — 102 — III(b) PW Remittances Cr.
Cash Settlement Suspense (8658-107)
Used when one PW Division makes a payment on behalf of another Division (typically when a contractor's work spans jurisdictions, or when one Division settles a bill that pertains to another Division's work). The originating Division debits 8658-107 — Cash Settlement Suspense; the destination Division accepts the claim and reverses.
Geetha-krishnan Committee Exception (1-4-1987)
Recommendations of the Geetha-krishnan Committee were given effect from 1 April 1987, ending the routing of all store purchases through the central supply route. Many departments now buy directly from suppliers — eliminating MPSS for those transactions. The result: MPSS today applies mostly to materials that continue to flow through DGS&D or specified supply organisations.
Key PW Forms
| Form | Purpose |
|---|---|
| CPWA-69 | Stock account / register of receipts & issues |
| CPWA-76A | Compiled monthly account of Division — submitted to PAO |
| CPWA-77 | Schedule of works expenditure |
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Pattern applies to | CPWD · Irrigation · AIR-DD-Civil Aviation engg · Roads Wing |
| CSS | 8658 — 107 Cash Settlement Suspense (inter-Division cash) |
| MPSS | 8658 — 129 Material Purchase Settlement Suspense (DGS&D) |
| PW Remittances | 8782 — 102 with sub-heads I, II, III(b) |
| "799" sub-heads | Stock Suspense · Misc Works Advances · Workshop Suspense |
| Geetha-krishnan effective | 1 April 1987 — direct procurement allowed |
| Stock register form | CPWA-69 |
| Monthly Division account | CPWA-76A |
| Schedule of works expenditure | CPWA-77 |
Remittances Between MEA & Indian Missions Abroad
Funding Indian Missions — The Mechanic
Mission raises requisition
Estimates monthly cash need in foreign currency. Sends requisition to MEA HQ.
MEA PAO authorises remittance
Computes rupee equivalent at the commercial rate applicable for outward remittance and asks RBI New Delhi to remit.
RBI New Delhi → agent bank abroad
Routes through the host-country agent bank (e.g. State Bank of India branch / correspondent bank).
Agent bank credits Mission account
Mission can now draw cheques in local currency.
Mission sends monthly compiled accounts
To MEA PAO in New Delhi — accounts in foreign currency along with rupee equivalent (at official rate) plus paid vouchers.
PAO posts the accounts & clears 8658-130
Final heads of expenditure (mostly 2061 — External Affairs) are debited; 8658-130 is minus-credited. Exchange differences go to 2075 — Loss/Gain by Exchange.
London High Commission uses head 8658-116 (England-India Remittances). Embassy in Washington DC historically had a different routing too — both are not handled under 8658-130.
Accounting Entries Step-by-Step
[2] When MEA Mission's monthly accounts & paid vouchers received Dr. 2061 — External Affairs (and other final heads) to 8658 — 130 MEA & Missions Suspense (minus debit) Dr. (–)
[3] Exchange differences Dr. or Cr. 2075 — Loss/Gain by Exchange to / from 8658 — 130 MEA & Missions Suspense
Worked Example — Embassy at Canberra
Suppose MEA PAO authorises remittance of A$ 63,700 to the Embassy at Canberra. At remittance, commercial rate ≈ ₹ 13.19 / A$; rupee outgo from RBI = ₹ 8,40,200. A month later, paid vouchers worth A$ 63,700 arrive. Account official rate ≈ ₹ 13.13 / A$ → rupee accounted value = ₹ 8,36,200. Exchange difference = ₹ 4,000 (loss).
[2] On vouchers received (₹ 8,36,200) + exchange loss (₹ 4,000) Dr. 2061 — External Affairs ₹ 8,36,200 Dr. 2075 — Loss by Exchange ₹ 4,000 to 8658 — 130 MEA & Missions Suspense (minus dr) Dr. (–) ₹ 8,40,200
Where the Mission holds balances in transit at year-end (vouchers not yet sent, money not yet spent), the balance is reflected under 8671 — Departmental Balances. This is distinct from 8658-130.
Time-Lag & Year-End Treatment
- 📅Normal time-lag — about 2 months between remittance and receipt of compiled accounts from Mission.
- 🎯Year-end — Missions are required to send March accounts by mid-April by special courier so the Annual Account closes correctly.
- 🪙Balance under 8658-130 at year-end represents remittances in transit + un-accounted vouchers. It should be small and ageing-analysed.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| Head & minor head | 8658 — 130 MEA & Missions Suspense |
| Used for | Remittances by RBI Delhi to agent banks abroad for Indian Missions |
| Excluded Missions | London (uses 8658-116) · Washington (different mechanism) |
| Final expenditure head | 2061 — External Affairs |
| Exchange diff head | 2075 — Loss/Gain by Exchange |
| Two rates used | Commercial (at remittance) vs Official (at accounting) |
| Departmental Balances head | 8671 — Mission's in-transit cash |
| Normal time-lag | ≈ 2 months |
| March accounts due | By mid-April (special courier) |
Adjustment Accounts with States / Railways / Posts / Defence
Why Not PAO Suspense?
- 🏛️Railways, Posts, Defence are separate departments with their own AG / Pr.CDA / DGP&A and their own cash balance head (8675-102, 104, 103). They are not peer PAOs of the civil side. So they cannot raise / accept inter-PAO claims under 8658-101.
- 🏪For Centre-to-State stores purchases — where a State Government supplies goods to a Central Department (or vice versa) — a similar dedicated Adjustment head is used.
- 📑The Adjustment Accounts live in the Remittances section (8786 to 8789) — not under suspense major head 8658.
The Four Adjustment Account Heads
Adjusting Account between Central & State Governments (excluding J&K, Sikkim) for stores supplies.
Adjusting Account between Civil Dept and Railways for inter-departmental dues.
Adjusting Account between Civil Dept and Department of Posts.
Adjusting Account between Civil Dept and Defence Services (Army / Navy / Air Force).
For J&K and Sikkim Governments, the inter-government settlement of stores purchases does not use 8786 — it uses 8658-101 PAO Suspense instead, reflecting their different banking arrangements.
Booking & Clearance Flow
Say a Central Civil Department receives stores from a State Government's supply division. The PAO of the Department must (a) record the expenditure under its own final head, and (b) credit the State's claim. The Adjustment Account 8786 holds the credit until settlement is effected through CAS Nagpur.
[2] Centre sends RB Advice to CAS Nagpur for settlement Dr. 8786 — Adjusting Account with State X to 8675 — 101 Deposits with RBI — Central-Civil Cr.
MEA-Arranged Purchases — A Sub-case
When MEA / Missions arrange purchases abroad on behalf of other Central Departments (typically defence imports, machinery for AIR, embassy property), the Department debits its final head and credits MEA & Missions Suspense (8658-130). MEA then settles with the supplier through its agent bank abroad. This does not involve Adjustment Accounts — it stays within Centre's own books.
Handling Rejected Claims
- ❌If the receiving department / government rejects the claim (wrong amount, missing voucher, time-barred), the rejection is communicated and the originating PAO must write back the Adjustment Account entry.
- 🔄The write-back is by minus credit (or minus debit) on the same Adjustment head, with the contra going to 8658-110 RB Suspense — CAO or to Vouchers Suspense (8658-102) depending on what went wrong.
- 📊Each PAO maintains a monthly age-analysis of un-settled items in 8786-89 and reports balances older than 6 months to the Pr. CCA / CGA.
The CGA's monthly review of Suspense and Remittance balances focuses heavily on Adjustment Accounts (8786-89) because un-cleared balances here represent inter-government IOUs — politically sensitive and easy to lose track of.
| Concept | Key Fact |
|---|---|
| States (excl. J&K, Sikkim) | 8786 Adjusting Account |
| Railways | 8787 Adjusting Account |
| Posts | 8788 Adjusting Account |
| Defence | 8789 Adjusting Account |
| J&K / Sikkim | Use 8658-101 PAO Suspense — NOT 8786 |
| Why not PAO Suspense for others? | They are separate self-accounting departments — not peer PAOs |
| Settlement route | RB Advice → CAS Nagpur book adjustment |
| MEA-arranged purchases | Stay in 8658-130 — not Adjustment Accounts |
| Rejection write-back | Through 8658-110 or Vouchers Suspense (8658-102) |
| CGA monitoring | Age-analysis monthly; items > 6 months reported |