Ramaphosa grants millionaire ministers a 3% salary increase

 ·3 Jul 2023

South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa has signed off on a 3% increase in the salaries of all public office bearers (POBs), according to a statement from the presidency.

The decision follows recommendations made by the Independent Commission for the Remuneration for public office bearers that salaries of all public office bearers, including ministers, judges, magistrates and traditional leaders, be increased by 3.8% for the 2022/2023 financial year, according to the statement on 1 July 2023.

“Having considered the commission’s recommendations and serious economic challenges facing the country, the president has decided that the salaries of all public office bearers be increased by 3%,” it said.

Ramaphosa has submitted the notice of his decision to parliament for approval before publication regarding the salaries of judges and magistrates.

Amid the proposal, some POBs had demanded a 7% increase in light of recent inflationary numbers, while others called for even more, as they pointed to a 20.6% decrease in their effective pay in recent years.

However, finance minister Enoch Godongwana said the fiscus could only afford a 1.5% increase and pleaded with the commission to re-assess the prevailing adverse economic conditions and the extent to which the general population faces despair, especially the survival of the population on government social assistance schemes and containing the wage bill to distribute funding to extreme priority programmes.

The Treasury added that the salary recommendations are tone-deaf in a country battling high poverty levels, forcing President Cyril Ramaphosa into a debt balancing act.

“Public office bearers are already receiving above-average remuneration, and the current recommendation by the commission will increase earnings beyond tolerable scales when budget constraints do not permit for such increases,” said the Treasury.

South Africa recorded a primary budget deficit in the year through March, missing National Treasury’s target for a surplus, after revenue collections fell short of estimates due to higher-than-anticipated value-added tax refunds.

Compensation accounts for almost a third of state expenditure and is crowding out spending on other priorities. Rating companies have flagged the country’s wage bill as an ongoing economic risk.

The country’s central bank has been implementing a restrictive policy stance in an effort to curb inflation, that’s now at 6.3%. Gross domestic product in South Africa expanded only 0.4% in the three months through March after contracting a revised 1.1% in the previous quarter.


Read: 4 new laws for South Africa waiting to be signed by Ramaphosa

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