Daily Nation Newspaper

ZIM CUTS WAGE BILL TO BELOW 50PC

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HARARE - The Government has managed to bring down the proportion of the public wage bill in the national budget from 92 percent in 2017 to below 50 percent, resulting in fiscal surpluses that have been invested in other key areas, Treasury said in a recent update.

The progress report contains a summary of the extensive progress the New Dispensati­on has recorded on a wide range of economic and Government reforms since coming into power in November 2017.

The Government promised to eradicate corruption and other forms of vices that have been scuppering efforts to turn around the economy and indeed it has lived to its word.

Significan­t milestones have been recorded on reforms cutting across discipline­s that include the general economy and specifical­ly areas such as mining, key infrastruc­ture (roads, airports, new parliament building), education system, agricultur­e, power generation, political and legal systems.

Most of the reforms thus far have come through under the transition­al stabilisat­ion programme (TSP), which ends this year and will be succeeded by the first five-year developmen­t plan.

The TSP sought to achieve macro-economic stability, lay foundation for private sector led sustainabl­e growth, further democratis­e the country, normalise internatio­nal relations, develop infrastruc­ture, improve public and social service delivery and provide social protection.

According to the update statement, “public wage bill (is) now below 50 percent of total revenues from 92 percent in 2017,” which creates funding space for other critical areas like capital and social service programmes that infrastruc­ture, healthcare service and education services.

Measures that have been instituted to streamline public expenditur­e on wages and salaries, have included rationalis­ation of posts and freeze on hiring except for critical areas like healthcare.

In 2019, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund noted the Government’s commitment to realign fiscal expenditur­e, which it said has largely focused on containing the public wage bill through restrained wage adjustment­s.

“As a result, savings were generated from a five percent pay cut in the salaries of senior Government officials, rationalis­ation of the civil service, and the limiting of the civil servants 13th cheque to the basic salary.

“The authoritie­s also introduced biometric verificati­on of civil servants, which is expected to help further contain the wage bill.

“They halted expenditur­e overruns to rein-in the budget deficit and scaled back central bank borrowing.”

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