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Jamaica gov’t moving apace to review public sector pay and allowance system

Finance and the Public Service Minister, Dr. Nigel Clarke noted that the objective is to attain a wage bill to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio of nine per cent.

Saturday, 9th February 2019

Finance and the Public Service Minister, Dr. the Hon. Nigel Clarke

The Government is moving apace to streamline the complex compensation and allowance system across the public sector.

Finance and the Public Service Minister, Dr. the Hon. Nigel Clarke, said that a policy, philosophy and accompanying strategies will be developed over the next 18 months.

He noted that the objective is to attain a wage bill to gross domestic product (GDP) ratio of nine per cent.

Dr. Clarke was providing an update on the Government’s Public Sector Transformation Programme at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston on Thursday (February 7).

He advised that the Transformation Implementation Unit (TIU) is examining data acquired from ministries, departments and agencies in 2018, and will engage unions representing public-sector workers, among other stakeholders, to discuss options for streamlining and making the compensation structures “more efficient and more transparent”.

This undertaking, he added, “will gather momentum in the upcoming [2019/20] financial year”.

Dr. Clarke said the review is consistent with the fiscal imperative being pursued by the Administration under the transformation programme, which he described as “very important”.

“Without having sustainable fiscal accounts, nothing else can really happen… we can’t shy away from that,” he added.

Minister Clarke said the review will address the multiplicity of grades for positions and allowances across the public sector, which total 325 and 175, respectively.

He said that the number of grades makes it difficult for the Government to project budgets for salaries and allowances negotiated.

Additionally, he noted that “when you have 175 [categories] of allowances with 40 bargaining units, you can’t keep track of the increase in the wage bill… and it also leads to inequities across the system”.

“Another problem is that because the grades are not compatible, it allows for all kinds of arbitrage… between persons being in this Ministry or that [agency] instead of just being [an officer] who has this level of competence. When you have greater transparency about these things, it allows for greater efficiency and satisfaction on the part of the public officer,” Dr. Clarke added.

In addition to wage bill management, other key areas of government operations being targeted are: public sector efficiency and information and communications technology; shared corporate services; public bodies; and human resource management.

Dr. Clarke emphasised that the Government’s vision “is for a modern public service that is fair, that values people, and that consistently delivers high-quality service”.

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