SRC says Kenya living beyond its means as wage bill shoots up
SRC Chair Lyn Mengich during a previous address. PHOTO | COURTESY
The Salaries and Remuneration Commission
(SRC) says Kenya is living beyond its means and that the cost of the wage bill
is eating into much of the country's revenues beyond the allowed maximum of 35
percent.
SRC Chair Lyn Mengich says the growing
appetite and endless hiring by the government risks pushing up the wage bill
further, making it difficult to reserve resources for delivery of services and
development.
With the required wage bill to revenue ratio
way above the recommended 35% target of the PFM Act and Regulations, SRC says
the wage bill to ordinary revenue ratio has declined from 54.77% in FY 2020/21
to 40.45% in the current financial year.
The SRC added 937,900 public sector employees
account for Ksh.1.035 trillion of the total Ksh.2.2 trillion revenue, and if
the current statistics stay constant, the commission says this will shoot up to
Ksh.1.428 trillion in the financial year 2028/29.
SRC, despite the grim statistics, projects to
lessen the wage bill to revenue ratio in the financial year 2028/29 to 34.58%,
but against a tide of unexplained decisions including the employment of 250
Kenyans without due diligence according to the Public Service Commission (PSC).
Nearly eight months since the positions of
Chief Administrative Secretaries (CAS) were declared unconstitutional, a move
to reintroduce them will breach optimum staffing numbers.
"What we are finding today in all levels
of government is that we are carrying excess staff establishment. They are way
above our wage bill, especially national government and state
corporations," said Mengich.
The multi-stakeholder meeting attended by
stakeholders comes ahead of the third national wage bill conference in April at
the Bomas of Kenya.
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