Daily Nation Newspaper

Mboweni grapples to stabilise public wage in medium-term budget

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JOHANNESBU­RG -

Minister of Finance Tito Mboweni announced in his medium-term budget policy statement that government would propose a 1.8 percent increase in the public service wage bill for the 2020-21 financial year and slightly lower growth in the remaining years of the medium-term.

Mboweni tabled the medium-term budget policy statement in Parliament on Wednesday. It was the first medium-term budget policy statement since the advent of the pandemic and the first since President Cyril Ramaphosa tabled his Economic Reconstruc­tion and Recovery Plan two weeks ago.

The public service wage bill for the 2019-20 financial year stood at R567 billion, according to the 2020 medium term budget policy statement.

While the proposal to increase the public service wage bill is at odds with Mboweni’s announceme­nt in his February Budget Speech that the wage bill would be put on ice, it is in beat with Ramaphosa’s economic recovery plan, which seeks to leverage the public service to create jobs.

“Government proposes growth in the public-service wage bill of 1.8 per cent in the current year and average annual growth of 0.8 per cent over the 2021 MTEF period,” the medium-term budget policy statement said.

Mboweni’s national budget ‘‘The Minister of the Public Service and Administra­tion and the leadership of the public service unions are meeting to discuss how best we adapt to the reality that we must do more with less, and that we are all in this together.’’

tabled in February, in which the minister is looking to contain spending on public service wage bill to realise savings of R160.2 billion over three years.

Unions opposed this, clinging to a 2018 public service wage agreement hiking public service wages by CPI plus one percent for general workers and CPI plus 0.5 percent for workers at a director level from April 1.

“The Minister of the Public Service and Administra­tion and the leadership of the public service unions are meeting to discuss how best we adapt to the reality that we must do more with less, and that we are all in this together,” Mboweni said.

The medium-term budget policy statement was quick to point out, though, that government did not implement the third year of the 2018 wage agreement.

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