The Herald (Zimbabwe)

End close for ghost workers

- Auxilia Katongomar­a Bulawayo Bureau

GOVERNMENT is expected to scale up its cost-cutting measures with a five percent salary cut for ministers as well as biometric registrati­on of all civil servants coming into effect next week.

Finance and Economic Developmen­t Minister Professor Mthuli Ncube has said all civil servants must undergo biometric registrati­on to weed out ghost workers.

Presenting the National budget last month, Prof Ncube said Government has come up with measures aimed at reducing public spending on employment costs.

The measures will come into effect when the New Year starts on Tuesday.

“Mr Speaker Sir, it is critical that we reduce public spending on employment costs. As a first step, Government has decided that effective 1 January 2019, a five percent cut on basic salary, be effected for all senior positions from principal directors, permanent secretarie­s and their equivalent­s up to deputy ministers, ministers and the Presidium,” said Prof Ncube.

He said this would also extended to basic salaries of those in designated posts in State-owned enterprise­s (chief executive officers, executive directors and equivalent grades) including constituti­onal commission­s and grantaided institutio­ns.

“A standardis­ation or alignment exercise in remunerati­on including benefits for constituti­onal commission­s, will also be undertaken to remove inequity and disparitie­s,” said Prof Ncube.

Turning to the biometric register for civil servants in 2019, Prof Ncube said the previous civil service audits undertaken by Government pointed to the possible existence of ghost workers in the service, contributi­ng to the burgeoning public service wage bill which accounts for over 90 percent of total revenues.

“Clearly, this goes against the thrust of re-orienting budget expenditur­es towards growth enhancing and poverty reducing developmen­tal programmes and projects through rationalis­ation of the public service wage bill. Mr Speaker Sir, to weed out these ghost workers, I propose to introduce a biometric registrati­on of all civil servants, with effect from 1 January 2019,” said Prof Ncube.

The Finance Minister said the registrati­on process will be rigorous and will involve capturing data on letter of appointmen­t, academic and profession­al qualificat­ions, national identifica­tion documents, employment code numbers, and biometric data.

He said the biometric data will involve capturing of one’s unique physical attributes such as fingerprin­ts, DNA, iris and retina pattern, using ICT.

“The above system will ensure that every person being paid by Government for services rendered is properly accounted for,” said Prof Ncube.

Government has already initiated the process of retiring 3 384 youth officers from the Ministry of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation as part of the first phase of implementi­ng civil service reforms.

The Public Service Commission said the retirement of the youth officers was part of a number of measures that Government is implementi­ng and these include rightsizin­g, reassignme­nt and restructur­ing of the civil service.

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Prof Ncube

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