The National Treasury building in Nairobi. FILE PHOTO | NMG
Summary
- World Bank report says Kenya will save up to Sh2.5 billion monthly from reduced local and foreign trips by employees of national government, counties and parastatals
- Civil servants are missing out on Sh2.5 billion in travel benefits and subsistence allowances monthly after restrictions imposed to curb the spread of coronavirus suspended meetings and out of town assignments.
- The World Bank in its latest review of Kenya’s expenditure says the country will save up to Sh30 billion in the year to June 2021 or Sh2.5 billion monthly from civil servants reduced local and foreign trips — which often involve lavish travel allowances.
World Bank report says Kenya will save up to Sh2.5 billion
monthly from reduced local and foreign trips by employees of national
government, counties and parastatals
Civil servants are
missing out on Sh2.5 billion in travel benefits and subsistence
allowances monthly after restrictions imposed to curb the spread of
coronavirus suspended meetings and out of town assignments.
The
World Bank in its latest review of Kenya’s expenditure says the country
will save up to Sh30 billion in the year to June 2021 or Sh2.5 billion
monthly from civil servants reduced local and foreign trips — which
often involve lavish travel allowances.
The pause in
meetings has denied employees of the national government, the county
governments, and parastatals opportunities to boost their wages through
perks such as mileage, sitting and subsistence allowances earned from
local and foreign travels.
The untaxed allowances have
the effect of more than doubling an employee’s pay, making the civil
service the preferred employer for many Kenyans.
“With continued limitation of daily subsistence allowance (DSA)
and travel-related costs, the government could save up to Sh30 billion
in the second half of FY2019 and first half of FY2020 as a result of
restrictions imposed to contain the spread of Covid-19 on domestic and
foreign travel, training and workshops,” said Felipe Jaramillo, the
country director for Kenya, in the report.
The civil
service looks set to save additional billions of shillings following the
work-from-home directive given that hospitality and training cost
taxpayers Sh15.1 billion in the year to last June or an average of
Sh1.25 billion monthly.
Employers have pushed their
staff to work from home in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has
drastically changed the way business is conducted.
Kenya
suspended international passenger travel, closed schools indefinitely,
closed bars and golf clubs, imposed a daily dusk-to-dawn curfew and
banned public gatherings to curb the spread of the virus that has
infected 10,294 people and killed 197 locally.
President
Uhuru Kenyatta last Monday announced a phased reopening of the country
from the Covid-19 lockdown, lifting restrictions on travel in and out of
the Nairobi Metropolitan Area, Mombasa and Mandera and allowing air
travel to resume.
But the Treasury says that
restrictions on meetings, travel and trainings for civil servants will
remain in the coming months, denying public servants fat perks.
The World Bank reckons that public servants use the travel perks to enlarge their salaries.
“While
daily subsistence allowances (DSA) paid in connection with domestic and
international travel fall under ‘other goods and services’ rather than
the wage bill, DSA appears, at times and in part, to be used to
supplement formal remuneration,” Mr Jaramillo said.
The
highest-ranking public servant is entitled to Sh22,000 for a day’s stay
in Naivasha, Mombasa, Kisumu, Nairobi, Kilifi, Lamu and Kwale —
explaining why these towns have become popular with government retreats.
The lowest-cadre worker travelling to these towns is entitled to a Sh4,200 allowance per day.
Senior
civil servants earn Sh18,000 per day for retreats held in Nyeri,
Eldoret, Kericho, Kakamega, Kilifi, Embu, Nanyuki, Nakuru, Lodwar and
Garissa. The lowest-ranking officials earn Sh3,500.
The deal gets rosier for civil servants travelling abroad who receive an average of Sh50,000 per day in allowances.
The
allowances structure shows that the payouts are higher for visits to
the more frequented places like Arusha in neighbouring Tanzania and
Addis, the African Union headquarters (ranging between Sh60,930 and
Sh21,150), while rarely visited places like war-ravaged Afghanistan
attract the lowest stipends of between Sh51,750 and Sh16,110 per day.
The
Treasury singled out overseas trips — which often involve hefty travel
allowances and huge entourages — and hospitality or entertainment spend
by government departments — as examples of wasteful spending.
Spending
on foreign and local trips setback taxpayers Sh12.5 billion in the year
to June 2019, up from Sh3 billion five year, reflecting a rise of 18.7
percent.
Central government hospitality spending has
tripled from Sh3.9 billion in the year to June 2014 to Sh9.8 billion
last year. Counties spend undisclosed billions on entertainment like to
conferences and training.
Parliament suspended all
foreign travel effective March 13 and directed that all conferences,
retreats and workshops be held within precincts of Parliament in Nairobi
in the wake of the virus outbreak.
Committee meetings
have also been curbed, save for those that touch on budget and health
that a critical in allocating cash and shaping policy decisions in the
fight against coronavirus.
This has stopped the
allowances gravy train given the perks have the effect of doubling the
MPs basic salary, which stands at Sh580, 000 monthly.
The
total take-home for Kenyan MPs rose to Sh1.1 million per month when
perks from mileage, sitting and responsibility allowances are factored
in.
Foreign and local trips cost taxpayers Sh33.4 billion in the year to June 2019, up from Sh20.3 billion five years ago.
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