Barely a fortnight into their jobs,ย Kenyaโs new lawmakers have forced through a change to their salary that includes a perk of $60,000 for a luxury car.
Under a review of legislatorsโ earnings agreed in Kenya before the March national elections, salaries were agreed to be cut from $120,000 a year to $75,000, and perks including interest-free loans for vehicles and houses were to be scrapped.
The measures were necessary because under a new constitution that made structural changes including a new senate, the older wages for public servants were predicted to be unsustainable.
But part of those cuts are already being reversed.ย Kenyan budgetary officials were this week forced to backtrack and agree that the 416 new legislators will each be handed $60,000 for a new car.
Rates for mileage driven while on official business have also almost doubled, to between $2 and $3.70 a mile, depending on the vehicle’s engine size.
The move has been met with weary resignation โย and some anger โย among Kenyans who elected new members of parliament, hoping they might achieve a break from the pork and excesses of the past.
โSometimes I wonder if we Kenyans are stupid truly to believe any new parliament will be different from the last one,โ says Beatrice Mathenge, an office cleaner inย Nairobi, Kenyaโs capital. โEach time they reach office, the very first thing they do is award themselves more salary. Meanwhile we are all struggling even to make ends to meet.โ
Originally the lawmakers were to be offered loans of up to $82,000 to fund vehicle purchases, and to be repaid over five years at 3 percent interest.
Even though this interest rate is a fraction of the average 19 percent that Kenyaโs commercial banks offer to account holders, members of parliament said they would not be able to afford to pay the loans back.
This was despite their salaries โย even at reduced levels โย being 42 times higher than an average Kenyan would expect to earn in a year.
In March when announcing the lower pay, Sarah Serem, head of the salaries commission, said, โWe are trying to instill a sense of fiscal prudence by letting the MPs own and maintain their own cars or homes.”
This week, one parliamentarian complained that Ms. Serem โwanted MPs to go and buy cheap cars like a [Toyota] Probox,โ a small Japanese station wagon popular with ordinary Kenyans.
โWhat type of car does she think we can buy with $60,000,โ Mithika Linturi asked in Kenyaโs Standard newspaper.
Financial analysts calculate that Kenyaโs $5.5 billion public sector wage bill has doubled in the last four years and now consumes half of domestic revenue.
Legislators have also warned that they plan to enact new laws that will overturn the pay cut instituted by the salaries commission, and return their earnings to $120,000 a year or more.
Source:csmonitor.com