Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Treasury grapples with how to fund state employee pay hike

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The Treasury is grappling to find additional revenue to pay public sector salaries as 1.5 million employees would receive a wage hike shortly, official sources said.

The country’s recurrent expenditur­e on public sector salaries and pensions will account for 45 per cent of the government’s revenue this year.

The 2019 budget has allocated Rs.40 billion to pay the increased amount between Rs. 2,500 and Rs. 10,000 from the lowest to higher grades of public sector employees with effect from January as the last tranche of Rs.10,000 salary hike granted in 2016.

Additional revenue is needed to meet the expenditur­e in paying this allowance granted to the public sector from the 2019 budget starting July 1, a senior Treasury official told the Business Times adding that it has become extreme difficult to find money towards this end.

The Government has to pay Rs.1 trillion of Rs.1.5 trillion recurrent expenditur­e this year as public sector salaries and pensions.

The Treasury has to manage the annual state expenditur­e of Rs.4.5 trillion with the targeted revenue of Rs. 2.4 trillion; he said pointing out the payment of public sector salaries will become a daunting task within the next three months.

Expenditur­e on public sector salaries will further increase as plans are underway to recruit more unemployed graduates in addition to 20,000 unemployed graduates already recruited to the state sector.

Raising the present public employees ageing issue, he noted that there will be a dearth of first tier senior officials in the public sector institutio­ns within the next two to three years as most of them are in retirement age or under extension of services.

The government should take a policy decision soon either to extend their services till they reach the age of 65 or 70 years or granting them contract employment without perks to prevent the sudden collapse of top level bureaucrac­y.

Young bureaucrat­s in public institutio­ns should be given an opportunit­y to climb the ladder to reach the top level without allowing them to wait in the same position for decades, he pointed out.

These young officials should be given proper training and learning placing them to understudy with top bureaucrat­s of retiring age enabling the young officers to take up the hierarchy of the bureaucrac­y when they reach the age of 40-45 years, he suggested. (Bandula)

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