Government says
its 2014-2016 budget guidelines will instruct all government agencies to
provide realistic budgets for the compensation of their employees as part of
broader measures to avert fiscal explosion, Minister of Finance and Economic
Planning Seth Terkper has disclosed.
Appropriate
sanctions will be applied to Ministries Department and Agencies (MDAs) and Municipal,
Metropolitan and District Assemblies (MMDAs) that fail to comply with the
guidelines related to budgeting for compensation of employees, he said.
Mr. Terkper
outlined this directive when he spoke to journalists on a wide range of economic
issues at a two-day programme organised by the Institute of Financial and
Economic Journalists in collaboration with Star Ghana on the performance of the 2013 budget and expectations for
2014.
Mr. Terkper
said: “All MDAs and MMDAs are to budget realistically for the compensation of
their employees using the new chart of accounts. Salary and salary-related
allowances, and other allowances, are to be budgeted for and supported with
copies of approval of conditions of service by the Fair Wages and Salaries
Commission and the Public Services Commission.”
He explained that only
net recruitment of staff will be permitted for MDAs with an automatic
recruitment policy in 2014 and into the medium-term.
He also said salaries of employees of MDAs and MMDAs will be paid
by the Controller and Accountant-General’s Department only after the heads of
these institutions have certified a pre-list of persons and amounts to be paid.
There have been
calls on government to trim expenditure on wages, which have become a bane to
the national economy with critics insisting that the
Single Spine Salary Structure is the cause of the huge wage bill.
Approximately 73 percent of domestic revenue from
taxes is used to pay public service workers.
The wage bill jumped from about GH¢2billion prior to
the implementation of the new pay policy to about GH¢7billion in 2012, according
to data from that year’s budget.
Recent data from the Ministry of Finance also indicate that about GH¢3.5billion was spent on wages and salaries from January to May this year, and this was about 22.4 percent higher than the budget target of GH¢2.9billion.
Recent data from the Ministry of Finance also indicate that about GH¢3.5billion was spent on wages and salaries from January to May this year, and this was about 22.4 percent higher than the budget target of GH¢2.9billion.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) in April this
year sounded the alarm over the country’s rising wage bill and warned that if
it was not tamed, it would increase the country’s debt portfolio to levels
which could pose a risk to its transformational agenda.
Touching on the
huge budget deficit registered in 2012, he said government hopes to reduce the
gap to 9 percent of GDP in 2013, and further down to 6 percent by 2015.
Proposed
supporting measures to fix the fiscal challenges include an upward adjustment
in petroleum prices to address the burden of subsidies on the budget. The
strategy is to implement frequent petroleum price adjustments, he emphasised.
The high
interest cost is being addressed with plans to refinance government debt
through substitution of short-term debt that has high interest rates with
medium- to long-term low interest debt.
Government,
according to the Finance Minister, will also conduct closer scrutiny of monthly
expenditure relative to forecasts to ensure that expenditure targets are
achieved.
The economy is
expected to grow at 8% in 2013, with an end-period inflation of 9% and gross international
reserves equivalent to not less than three months of imports.
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