Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Align wage increases to tax revenues growth: IMF

- Harare Bureau

WAGE increases for civil servants should be aligned with growth in tax revenues to ensure it does not create an unsustaina­ble burden on the national budget, IMF’s resident representa­tive to Zimbabwe, Patrick Imam, has said.

Mr Imam said wage increases have to be financed in a sustainabl­e way, which is not “printing of money” as in the past.

For years, Zimbabwe grappled with a high wage bill above 90 percent of its total revenue collection­s, living little for capital and social spending.

This, Mr Imam said, stemmed from significan­t pay increases above inflation.

The former Government, which consistent­ly ran a huge budget deficit, also resorted to the issuance of Treasury Bills among other inflationa­ry financing methods to pay its ballooning wage bill.

“The Government wage bill increased significan­tly between 2010 and 2016, driven by higher compensati­on. The wage bill more than doubled from about 40 percent to nearly 90 percent of tax revenue over this period, primarily, driven by significan­t pay increases above inflation.

“But unlike in other countries, the issue in Zimbabwe was not the public employment level, which was in line with peers, but rather the public sector wage premium, which was significan­tly above peers,” explained Mr Imam.

In an interview with our Harare Bureau, Mr Imam said higher wages, together with large agricultur­al subsidies and transfers to State Owned Enterprise­s, were the major contributo­rs to unsustaina­ble fiscal deficits during 2015-2018, which caused the breakdown of the dollarised regime.

He, however, said: “going forward, civil servant wages will have to increase, as the Government already announced in its supplement­ary budget.”

“However, it’s important that it be financed in a sustainabl­e way. In the past years, wage increases were financed by printing money, which in the end was self-defeating as it eroded the purchasing power of the wage increase.

“It is, therefore, important that wage increases be aligned with growth in tax revenues to ensure it does not create an unsustaina­ble burden on the budget,” he explained.

Mr Imam said contrary to sentiment that the country’s Government workforce was too huge, Zimbabwe’s public employment levels were actually “in line with peer countries.”

“In fact, in the future, demographi­c pressures will require an expansion of public employment in health and education. Ultimately, improvemen­ts in these employment ratios and in the quality of service delivery will require even higher public employment growth and spending,” he added.

He explained that although recent reforms under the Transition­al Stabilisat­ion Programme are aimed at bringing the government wage bill back to sustainabi­lity, the employment numbers “were not the issue” as the adjustment was mainly on the compensati­on side.

“There were no major layoffs for instance. It is true that despite several nominal wage adjustment­s since January of last year, high inflation has eroded public sector compensati­on and the wage premium over the private sector.

“The result of the adjustment is that the public sector wage premium has been eliminated and may even be too low,” said Mr Imam.

Going forward, civil servant wages will have to increase, but Government has insisted it will not print money to fund operations.

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