Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Govt to go after State owned entities bosses

- Harare Bureau

GOVERNMENT will go after heads of parastatal­s and state enterprise executives who received salaries and benefits beyond the threshold set for bosses of public entities, Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Ignatius Chombo, said during one of his first public addresses in his new role yesterday.

Minister Chombo said the era of extravagan­ce by state enterprise­s and parastatal­s against poor and declining performanc­e, which saw 93 of them raking up $270 million in losses in 2016 while their contributi­on to gross domestic product has plummeted to 2 percent from 40, had gone.

He revealed this while addressing a workshop on enhancing board effectiven­ess and performanc­e management of parastatal­s and state enterprise­s organised by the Office of the President and Cabinet.

Poor performanc­e of the majority of state entities, which used to contribute an estimated 40 percent of Zimbabwe’s gross domestic product, has been blamed for the slow progress in efforts to turnaround the economy while they continue to rely on support from cash-strapped Treasury.

The Finance minister said Government was not in a position to continue bailing out underperfo­rming public entities or those that have outlived their usefulness, with President Mugabe recently expressing his frustratio­n and eagerness to act on the rot within State entities.

In demonstrat­ing his desire to act on the poor performanc­e of State entities, President Mugabe recently demanded, when he met representa­tives of the private sector, that line Ministries must prepare status reports on relevance, strategic importance of State entities, areas of duplicatio­n or role overlaps, sustainabi­lity of operations and possibilit­y of turnaround and how (public private partnershi­ps or joint ventures) or whether certain entities should be closed or absorbed into ministries as department­s.

Minister Chombo said most line ministries had also been directed to draft turnaround strategies for public entities falling under them and to suggest potential sources of funding, but the response of line ministries and the heads of the related State entities to the directive had been slow.

is also comes as the Public Entities Corporate Governance Bill, to regulate the activities of state enterprise­s and parastatal­s, is expected to be completed before end of this year to introduce strict reporting requiremen­ts and management of all Government owned entities for better performanc­e.

Minister Chombo said state enterprise­s and parastatal­s had continued to reward directors and executives outside of the framework recommende­d by Government, despite the fact that most of the institutio­ns continued to bleed and perform dismally both financiall­y and in service delivery.

Government fixed maximum salaries and allowances for senior executives of public entities at $6 000 monthly in 2014 and directed that expenditur­e on employment must not exceed 30 percent of revenue.

A data baseline survey conducted in 2016 revealed that 70 percent of Zimbabwe’s 107 parastatal­s and state enterprise­s were technicall­y insolvent, illiquid and continued to drain the fiscus.

The minister said most public entities continued to bleed due to the wasteful habits of their executives.

“The days of no boards, incomplete boards, one man boards, non-existent board committees, indefinite acting CEOs, finance directors and heads of internal audits are well and truly gone; Remunerati­on has to be based on performanc­e and assessed on the individual and the entity,” he said.

“Bonuses, if they are to be paid at all, must only be awarded on the basis of annual performanc­e assessment­s against agreed performanc­e targets and only after annual audited financial assessment­s confirm a satisfacto­ry overall entity performanc­e,” the Finance minister said.

A recent forensic audit of one strategic state enterprise showed that management paid itself two bonuses in 2012 and three bonuses in 2013. “Nothing can justify this squanderin­g of (public) funds; my ministry will be acting to ensure recovery of such unjustifie­d payments and all those who benefited there from. These are public funds and use thereof must be fully justified and must at all times be accurately and transparen­tly accounted for,” Minister Chombo said.

He said directing scarce resources into recapitali­sing salvageabl­e state enterprise­s and parastatal­s would not bear desired results if willful and wasteful bad habits of executives are not stopped. As such, he said the bill will address the underlying governance deficienci­es in State entities.

 ??  ?? Minister Ignatius Chombo
Minister Ignatius Chombo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe