By LYNET IGADWAH, ligadwah@ke.nationmedia.com
In Summary
- Treasury is targeting to save Sh51 billion in the cut on non-priority spending captured in the supplementary budget.
- The cut comes as the Kenya Revenue Authority recently reported it missed its half-year tax collection targets by a massive Sh47.6 billion.
- President Uhuru Kenyatta has made reducing Kenya’s ballooning public sector wage bill a top priority.
The Treasury is preparing massive cuts on civil servants’ travel, pay and allowances budgets this financial year.
Documents tabled last week in Parliament by the Controller
of Budget indicate that the Treasury is targeting to save Sh51 billion
in the cut on non-priority spending captured in the supplementary
budget.
Pay, allowances and travel budgets will be slashed
by the biggest margin as part of austerity measures meant to reduce the
government wage bill and free up funds for use in development.
The budget for basic salaries has been cut by Sh12
billion to Sh151.5 billion, signalling a freeze in hiring and pay rises
since the government has ruled out job cuts.
Allowances, which have made public service an
attractive employer with a number of benefits not provided by private
companies, have been reduced by Sh28 billion to Sh75 billion.
Currently, allowances have the effect of doubling
employee’s pay and analysts want the perks capped at between 10 and 25
per cent of a civil servant’s basic pay.
Travel budget has dropped by Sh3 billion to Sh19.7
billion with the budget for staff training being slashed by Sh6 billion
to Sh20 billion.
The cut comes as the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA)
recently reported it missed its half-year tax collection targets by a
massive Sh47.6 billion.
The revenue drop has also made it urgent for the
Treasury cut non-priority spending in the quest to balance the books and
ease borrowing.
If Parliament passes the supplementary budget as it
is, the Treasury expects that savings on wage bill will be biggest at
Sh40 billion. However it has not offered explanations on how this
savings will be achieved.
Despite publicly ruling out job cuts, the
government, in talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has
repeatedly mentioned layoffs as way of reducing the wage bill.
Kenya’s public wage bill – including ministries,
departments, agencies, commissions, the disciplined forces and
independent constitutional offices – is estimated at Sh568 billion or 11
per cent of the gross domestic product (GDP) compared to the global
best practice of seven per cent.
At Sh568 billion, the public wage bill also stands
at more than 50 per cent of total revenues against globally recommended
threshold of not more than 35 per cent.
President Uhuru Kenyatta has made reducing Kenya’s ballooning public sector wage bill a top priority.
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