Daily Nation Newspaper

SA MINISTERS AND DEPUTIES TO DO WITH LESS PERKS

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- Finance Minister Tito Mboweni appears to be making inroads in his campaign to have ministers' belts tightened and get used to slim fringe benefits.

Mboweni has been outspoken on the need for government to cut costs by cutting the size of the cabinet and spending less on ministers' perks like vehicles and air travel among others.

The Sunday Times reported yesterday that the revised ministeria­l handbook which was approved by during cabinet lekgotla earlier this week might just be something that will put a smile on Mboweni's face, although the minister holding the state's purse string would rather have his colleagues using their own vehicles, like he does.

The revised handbook will also give Mboweni's office and any minister of finance after him some powers to overlook procuremen­t of vehicles for members of the executive.

According to the publicatio­n, the revisions bar members of the executive from buying new vehicles directly and force them to do so through the minister of finance.

"Official vehicles are to be procured through a transversa­l contract concluded by national treasury to ensure the procuremen­t of cheaper vehicles, more efficient service, limitation on expenditur­e and standardis­ation," the paper quoted the new handbook.

The amended handbook has also set the highest price for vehicles for members of the executive at R700, 000, from the R1.6m and R1.3m ceiling in terms of what a minister and deputy minister could spend on a luxury car of their choice before.

It is also reported that Mboweni has instructed treasury director general, Dondo Mogajane, to sell two BMW X5s that were bought for his predecesso­r and his deputy. Mogajane reportedly told the publicatio­n that his department acquired the German more modest," Mogajane told Sunday Times. The new handbook has also clipped the wings of ministers' spouses and the officials' first class junkets.

"For both domestic and internatio­nal travel, members (of the executive) are permitted to fly business class using the cheapest of three quotations for the most cost-effective and convenient route," the Sunday Times reported quoting from the new handbook.

Unlimited trips of spouses accompanyi­ng ministers have now been cut to only two a year on internatio­nal trips and even then only "under certain circumstan­ces."

Further luxury cuts will have to be reflected against South African standards for ministers travelling abroad with them now being required to only stay

 ??  ?? Finance Minister Tito Mboweni
Finance Minister Tito Mboweni

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