Friday, September 13, 2013

Governors target pensions to fund county projects


From left: Bungoma Governor Ken Lusaka, Laptrust managing director Hosea Kili and Murang’a Governor Mwangi Wairia during a forum organised by Laptrust to discuss investments and alternative funding at the Safari Park Hotel in Nairobi on September 12, 2013. Photo/Salaton Njau

From left: Bungoma Governor Ken Lusaka, Laptrust managing director Hosea Kili and Murang’a Governor Mwangi Wairia during a forum organised by Laptrust to discuss investments and alternative funding at the Safari Park Hotel in Nairobi on September 12, 2013. Photo/Salaton Njau 
By George Omondi, omondi@ke.nationmedia.com

Posted  Thursday, September 12   2013 at  21:21
In Summary
  • Governors want Parliament to pass a new law that will enable them to issue bonds and access pension funds to finance county projects.
  • The proposal came even as the governors persisted in their quest for a constitutional amendment to fix their share of the national revenue at 40 per cent.

County governments want Parliament to pass a new law that will enable them to issue bonds and access pension funds to finance key projects at the local level. 
Such a law would open an additional window for each devolved government to chart own financing path as it deals with unique local needs that cannot be met by transfers from the national government alone, the governors said at a meeting in Nairobi Thursday.
The proposal came even as the governors persisted in their quest for a constitutional amendment to fix their share of the national revenue at 40 per cent instead of the current floor of 15 per cent.
“As heads of devolved governments, our challenges range from the provision of water, energy, roads and street lighting that cannot be met by mere disbursements from the National Treasury,” said Isaac Rutto, the chairman of National Council for Governors.
Mr Rutto spoke at a two-day governors’ forum on investments and alternative funding that opened Thursday.
The Constitution requires the national government to reserve at least 15 per cent of the national revenue for sharing among the 47 counties under a formula that gives Nairobi the lion’s share of the funds. 
The law further requires the Treasury to reserve 0.5 per cent of the national revenue (or Sh3.4 billion in this year’s budget) for sharing among the 14 poorest counties for a period of 20 years beginning 2010.
The governors said national institutions handling long-term projects had failed to align their programmes with the counties, leaving them to look for alternative means of financing.
The director-general of Vision 2030 secretariat Mugo Kibati told the governors to align their plans with Kenya’s long-term development goals for easy financing
“Just like the national flagship projects, every development activity undertaken at county level should be premised on its job generation ability,” said Mr Kibati.

The county governments, Mr Kibati said, were in a better position to acquire land compulsorily for critical public projects as opposed to National Land Commission technocrats who are likely to meet resistance from locals.

The call for additional financing came just days after Members of Parliament amended the Constituency Development Fund Act to regain control of the Sh17 billion that was to be managed by county governments.
The county governments have also lost control of the Sh6 billion Uwezo Fund, which is set for disbursement to the youth through CDF offices.

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