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President Uhuru welcomes salary cuts for self, civil servants

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Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta has welcomed salary cuts for his country’s state officers, saying the move will free more money for development agenda.

The East African country’s Salaries and Remuneration Commission (SRC) on Monday announced widespread cuts in salaries of state officers, including the president, his deputy and parliamentarians.

According to Uhuru, the cuts will result in savings of up to $84 million annually.

“I am pleased that the Commission has now made its recommendations and I am today announcing my unequivocal support for those broad and far-reaching recommendations,” he said on Tuesday morning.

In the new wage structures, the president will earn a monthly gross of about $14,000 (KSh1.4million), down from about $16,500 (Kshs1.6million), the deputy will earn $12,000  down from $14,000 while Cabinet Secretaries will earn $8,000 down from $10,000.

“I call upon every Kenyan to support the Commission’s recommendations. The days of wasteful allowances and peculiar but inexplicable payments are behind us. Better and more prosperous days lie ahead,” President Uhuru added.

Also notable, sitting allowance and mileage claims for MPs have been scrapped in the new recommendations.

The commission’s new salary structure is expected to bring down the wage bill from 52 percent of Gross Domestic Product to 35 percent of GDP.

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