Google – AFP,
8 March 2014
![]() |
Uhuru
Kenyatta at a conference in Kampala on November 30, 2013
(AFP, Isaac Kasamani)
|
Nairobi —
Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta has announced he and his deputy William Ruto
will be taking a 20-percent pay cut and ministers' salaries will be reduced by
10 percent in a bid to rein in the country's soaring public wage bill.
The pay
cuts will take place "with immediate effect," Kenyatta said in a
speech on Friday, adding that the current spending levels were unsustainable.
The
government will also limit foreign travel to only the most essential trips,
according to Kenyatta. "Wastage in my government will be significantly
reduced," he said.
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William
Ruto addresses a prayer service in
Nairobi on October 1, 2013 for the people
killed and injured in the attack on the
Westgate shopping mall (AFP, Simon
Maina)
|
"This
is why we are saying that is the ratio which is not sustainable... We need to
deal with this monster if we are to develop this nation."
The
president urged the country's lawmakers to follow his lead and also lower their
salaries, ranked among the highest in the world and long a source of discontent
among ordinary Kenyans.
"We
hope that other arms of government will follow suit and have their salaries
reviewed. The MPs have heard and know what Kenyans want," Kenyatta said.
MPs last
year reluctantly took a 40-percent pay cut, bringing their monthly pay checks
down to around 532,000 shillings ($6,100, 4,400 euros).
The
lawmakers had initially voted to give themselves a pay rise, sparking protests
from activists, before agreeing to accept the salary reduction ordered by the
Salaries and Remuneration Commission in return for other benefits.
Kenya's
lawmakers also sparked controversy in 2012 by voting to give themselves a
sendoff bonus of $110,000, a proposal that was vetoed by then-president Mwai
Kibaki.
According
to the Standard daily, Kenyatta, whose family is one of the continent's
wealthiest, will see his monthly income reduced to about 989,600 shillings,
while Ruto's will be lowered to 841,500 shillings.
The
combined savings will leave the state some 5.5 million shillings a year better
off, the Standard said.
The minimum
wage in Nairobi for a manual labourer is around 8,500 shillings a month.


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