President Uhuru Kenyatta chairs Cabinet meeting Thursday in Nairobi. |
Thursday, January 23rd 2014
By MOSES NJAGIH and LUKE ANAMI
Kenya: The government could be losing as
much as Sh1.8 billion annually through payment of salaries to ghost workers,
President Uhuru Kenyatta has revealed. The President said an on-going audit of
human resource in the public service by the Ministry of Devolution and Planning
indicated that Sh70 million had been lost in eight ministries. He said if the
trend was repeated across the 18 ministries “this will translate to Sh150
million monthly or Sh1.8 billion annually.” President Kenyatta revealed that
the interim report of the eight ministries so far audited had started revealing
worrying concerns, with government losing millions in a month to remunerate
ghost employees. “In an initial eight ministries partially audited, we have
found evidence that indicates that a considerable number of officers who are
either on secondment, are deceased, retired or have deserted their duties and
who therefore ought not to be remunerated, are still retained in the public
service payroll,” the President said in a statement.
He noted that this has
contributed in the continued expansion of the wage bill, “over and above the
true and correct position.” President Kenyatta said although the audit process
is still ongoing, and that verification of specific payments is being
undertaken, “initial reports suggest that considerable savings could be made on
recurrent expenditures upon the correction of these erroneous payments on the
system.” “Assuming the same trend holds, we are likely to save about Sh150
million monthly, and approximately Sh1.8 billion annually,” he observed. The
President said that in view of the “significance of these preliminary findings,
and the consternation that these revelations portend,” he had directed the
Devolution ministry and the Treasury to “contract a reputable external firm to
undertake a comprehensive human resource audit and payroll cleansing exercise”.
Reverse trend “The comprehensive audit should be undertaken within three
months, and a report of the findings submitted to this office soon thereafter,”
directed President Kenyatta. He said the final report of the review is expected
to significantly contribute to the rationalisation programme of the public
service currently being undertaken through the co-ordination of the Devolution
Ministry. He said it was for this reason that he had instructed the Devolution
Ministry, which is responsible for the Directorate of Public Service
Management, to carry out the human resource audit. President Kenyatta has in
past publicly complained about the huge wage bill, compared to what goes
towards development, and the need to reverse the trend. The Devolution Ministry
yesterday placed a newspaper advert for an expression of interest for
consultancy on capacity assessment and rationalisation in the public service at
both national and county governments.
“The government intends to
procure a reputable consultancy firm to provide expert support in the process
of capacity assessment and rationalisation of the public service… This
intention is to ensure objectivity, impartiality standardisation and quality
assurance in the whole exercise,” the advert stated. The revelation from the
President vindicates a section of governors, who had asked for the cleansing of
the payroll of public servants to be absorbed by the counties. The governors, led
by Council of Governors chairman Isaac Ruto, had raised an alarm about ghost
workers in government ministries and called for the sanitisation of the payroll
for functions that had been taken over by counties. The Commission for Revenue
Allocation chairman Micah Cheserem said the president should go further and
harmonise civil servants working in both the national and county governments to
avoid duplication of roles. “I want to congratulate the President. It’s obvious
that there are ghost workers in the public service. The exercise should go on
to ensure a lean civil service,” Cheserem said. Dr Conrad Bosire, a devolution
expert based in South Africa told The Standard that the revelation about the
illegal payments was because of the on-going devolution of the functions system
of government. “Implementation of devolution -- reorganisation and
restructuring of staff -- prompted this discovery. Governors have been crying
about huge inherited wage bills not matched with the actual number of seconded
staff,” said Dr Bosire, a doctoral researcher at the University of Western
Cape. He added: “If there is one benefit that devolution has brought on the
table is exposing such invisible corruption which has been enabled by the
centralisation. Is there any wonder that National Treasury was hesitant to
share the payroll with counties?” Dr Bosire said the officers who have been
paid the money should be surcharged. Manpower audit “If they are serious about
tracing the culprits, I am sure they will get them in the ministries,” said
Bosire. Ms Jacqueline Mugo, CEO Federation of Kenya Employers said: “For a long
time we have always suspected there are ghost workers in the public sector. We
have done skills and manpower audit whose results are yet to be released.
“We commend the president on the
move and ask him to go further to institute systems of checks and balances to
ensure there are no more ghost workers in the civil service.” Ms Mugo, who is
also a member of the Salaries and Remuneration Commission, said the exercise
should consider putting in place HR systems that can be used in instilling
governance and good HR practices that can go a long way in managing the wage
bill. “We at the SRC have always called for the carrying out of a job
evaluation to determine the roles and size of the public workforce that will
enable better remuneration. However, we have seen a section of our leaders
resist. We want to urge the president to insist on professionalism in the way
the civil service wages are managed,” Ms Mugo said.
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