Jamaica Gleaner

Give more on EY’s terms of reference

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FINANCE MINISTER Nigel Clarke perhaps needs to explain more about the near J$1-billion contract awarded to consulting firm EY, (formerly known as Ernst and Young), to sort out the Government’s byzantine pay structure and help bring greater efficiency to its operations so that the public is assured that this won’t be a short-term palliative and of the efficacy of lumping parliament­arians into this review.

According to Dr Clarke, there are 325 different salary scales, as well as nearly 200 allowances in the public sector, which makes for a complex and opaque system that doesn’t necessaril­y deliver fairness.

“One of our primary aims is achieving … internal equity, which is to ensure that relative compensati­on reflects relative job-evaluation score so that there is some internal consistenc­y to public-sector compensati­on,” the minister said.

We agree with Dr Clarke’s analysis of the situation and the end he hopes to achieve. But the further, and larger, question is whether the streamline­d salary structure to be presented by EY, if implemente­d, will be sustained and by what mechanism. Or, put another way, the EY analysis and recommenda­tions can’t be separate from a robust programme of publicsect­or transforma­tion, around which Jamaican government­s have tip-toed for decades.

As Dr Clarke knows, those 325 salary bands and 200 types of allowances did not happen overnight and weren’t developed without logic. They are the result of a mission creep that allowed workers and policymake­rs to work around rigidities in the public sector’s employment/compensati­on mechanism and the unwillingn­ess of politician­s to take really tough decisions.

It began with pricing public-sector jobs too cheaply so that Government is at a disadvanta­ge to the private sector when competing for talent and skills. Further, without a streamline­d pay structure and the periodic imposition of salary freezes as part of fiscal-containmen­t strategies, public-sector managers would make concession­s to wage negotiator­s who could either shout the loudest or had the potential to be most disruptive. Some of these might be hidden as allowances and perquisite­s rather than base salary.

REMOVE THE BLOAT

A better strategy would have been to take a long, hard look at the public sector and decide on the number of workers, and in what sectors, who would be required to efficientl­y operate a State that delivers agreed critical services. In other words, bloat would be removed from the public sector. At the end of the exercise, and with the ratio of public-sector wage bill to gross domestic product (GDP) unchanged, those workers would be better paid but required to perform at levels commensura­te with their improved remunerati­on.

Unfortunat­ely, a national conversati­on on these issues has, at best, been sporadic rather than sustained. In the circumstan­ces, there is no consensus on such a strategy. Our fear, then, is that in the aftermath of the EY report, the proposed bands, with a public sector of the proposed size, especially if there is not robust growth, will be unimplemen­table.

Dr Clarke, therefore, should tell whether EY has been asked to prescribe, or advise on, the optimum size of the public sector, even though that, ultimately, is determined by what is expected of the State, which, in part, is a political decision informed by philosophy and ideologica­l dispositio­n.

With regard to EY pronouncin­g on members of parliament­s’ pay, the terms of reference for this analysis are important and ought to be public, given that the job of a parliament­arian, or the expectatio­n thereof, is not readily, or easily, related to those of other public servants, which raises the question of comparable bands in which parliament­arians would fall.

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