Opinion and Analysis
Kenya has been in the grip of a teachers’ strike,
which a court has since ordered suspended, over government failure to
effect a 50 per cent pay rise.
The state argues it has no money. What does that mean? And
is that the only economic factor to consider? I am of the view that
teachers should be paid, so what’s the problem and can these issues be
resolved?
Well let’s look at the concerns government has.
Firstly, raising teachers’ wages will raise recurrent expenditure. This
column has already analysed government spending patterns; recurrent
spending is already too large and has to be brought down.
Analysis by the International Budget Partnership
indicates that in 2013/14 the government spent 78 per cent of the budget
on recurrent expenditure.
For 2014/15, recurrent expenses will eat into 63
per cent of the budget. This year, the recurrent versus development
estimate stands at 52 per cent to 48 per cent. Implementing a wage
increase for millions of teachers will push the recurrent budget up.
This is a concern.
Secondly is the budget deficit; the 2015/16 budget
deficit is set at 8.7 per cent of GDP. Implementation will raise this to
10-11 per cent of GDP according to some analysts. Why is this a
problem? Well the larger the deficit the more pressure on government to
borrow to meet this gap.
The government is already in significant debt at
Sh2.5 trillion. Frankly, there is already concern how government is
going to service this debt, particularly the foreign-denominated part in
the context of a weak shilling. It is unlikely government will borrow
more to pay the teachers.
The final issue is liquidity. The value of the
Kenyan shilling has been tanking and although it seems to be
stabilising, it is doing so at a much weaker point.
This has negative implications for servicing foreign debt as well as meeting the country’s import bill.
What does the teachers’ strike have to do with all
this? Well, remember the government is trying to stabilise and
eventually strengthen the shilling and there are several factors that
affect the value of the currency.
One such factor is how much money is circulating in
the economy. Because of the decline of the currency, CBK has been
trying to reduce the amount of shillings in circulation through
repurchase agreements.
The concern is that if teachers are paid, it will
inject significant amounts of shillings into the economy and this may
put additional downward pressure on the value of the currency.
As said before, this will have negative effects on
the government’s ability to meet import bills and service
foreign-denominated debt.
Moral obligation
These are some of the factors informing the spectre
of tax increases. But the truth of the matter is that there is a legal
and, in my view, moral obligation to implement the wage increase.
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