Governors now want the Senate
to dismiss or overhaul the ‘flawed and
discriminative’ proposed revenue-sharing formula by the Commission
on Revenue Allocation.
This, even as the county bosses
came under criticism from the
lawmakers for lacking seriousness
with the debate on the revenue
formula.
Senators are mulling retaining the
current formula to guide the sharing
of resources among 47 devolved units
for another five years.
Appearing before the Senate
Finance and Budget Committee that
is currently considering the proposed
formula, the county chiefs called for
its complete revision.
The governors
said some of the parameters captured
in the proposed formula are vague,
not scientific, too academic and
impractical and asked the Senate to
make several changes to it.
“What we are saying is that the
proposed revenue sharing formula is
flawed and discriminatory and should
be overhauled,” Kakamega Governor
Fernandes Barasa said.
Barasa, who is the Council of
Governors’ Finance Committee
chairman, added, “We cannot have a
formula that is going to disadvantage
other counties.”
Some 31 counties will lose billions
of shillings if Parliament approves
CRA’s proposal.
“The Council of Governors
emphasises the importance of a fair,
transparent and efficient fourth basis
for revenue sharing,” Barasa said.
He was accompanied by governors
Kimani Wamatangi (Kiambu),
Abdulswamad Nassir (Mombasa)
and Issa Timamy (Lamu) and Nakuru
Deputy Governor David Kones.
The formula will determine how
counties share revenue from 2025-26.
CRA has assigned ‘population’
the biggest weight, at 42 per cent, as
opposed to 18 per cent in the current
formula.
Population was weighted at 45
per cent in the second-generation
formula, while it was weighted at
45 per cent in the first framework.
Geographical size has a weight of
nine per cent from the current eight. Equal share has been given a
weight of 22 per cent from the
current 20, while poverty index
has been retained at 14 per cent.
“To facilitate service delivery, the
recommendation provides for an
equal minimum allocation across
all counties, using population and
geographical size of a county as the key transfer parameters,” CRA
chairperson Mary Chebukati said in
a report to the Senate.
CRA has introduced the ‘income
distance index’ and assigned it a weight of 13 per cent. “To address
economic disparities and promote
development, the framework
uses income distance and poverty
parameters as measures of inequality
among county governments.
However, the senators took issue
with the new parameter of the income
distance, saying it was not only
subjected to public participation but
was also arbitrary and unreasonable.
“The parameter on income distance
should be elaborated and subjected
to a wider stakeholder engagement or
dropped for a more widely acceptable
parameter,” Barasa said.
The governors said the parameter
may disincentivise economic activity
since counties with lower economic
output are getting significantly higher
allocations.
In the long run, it will compound
income and productivity inequalities.
On the poverty index, the
governors said the parameter only
seeks to reward poverty, adding the
framework had a sunset clause.
“We should not be seen to be
rewarding poverty… that the poorer
you are the more money you get,”
Nassir said.
However, the senators criticised
the governors’ submission for lacking
depth.
“If we were to go with your written
submission, it is the shallowest you
have ever presented in a very critical
issue such as this,” committee
chairman Ali Roba said.
The Mandera senator added,
“This only says one thing to me: a
lot of thought has not gone into this
presentation before coming before
this committee. The only minor
remedy that came out was your
verbal submission.”
“In future, this is a very critical
issue that is going to affect you
very seriously. You need to sit in it.
You don’t criticise without making
counter-proposals, otherwise, it just
becomes an academic exercise,” he
stated.
Cornered, the county bosses sought
for a week to rework their submission.
The panel gave until Wednesday
next week to submit a watertight
proposal, citing time constraints.
Kakamega Senator Boni Khalwale,
sought the opinion of the governors
on the proposal to retain the current
formula.
“In South Africa, they retain a
formula for 10 years. What will be
your opinion if we recommend the
retention of the current formula?”
Khalwale asked.