The National Treasury is set to implement an integrated
financial system that will deduct statutory payments for county government
employees at source to curb irregular payments.
Treasury Cabinet Secretary John Mbadi told the Senate County
Public Accounts Committee on Thursday that the dual-function system—combining
approvals and payments—will be operational by the end of this month.
The move comes amid mounting concerns over illegal and
irregular payments in counties, as well as failure to remit deductions to
statutory bodies like the Kenya Revenue Authority, Saccos and pension
schemes.
“We will start deducting all these statutory payments at
source,” Mbadi said.
“If you give me my salary, it should be paid in full. What
counties have been doing is paying only part of the salary and failing to remit
statutory deductions. That must stop.”
The CS was responding to concerns from senators over
widespread financial mismanagement at the county level, including cases where
counties requisition funds to pay a specific individual or supplier but divert
the money elsewhere.
Committee chair Moses Kajwang’ decried the practice as
unacceptable, likening it to fraudulent practices in the insurance sector.
“In insurance, if a claim is approved, you cannot pay
another claimant. But that is what is happening in county governments. It is
completely unacceptable,” he said.
“We must stop making counties places where
people enrich themselves. They should be spaces for public service, not
self-service.”
Senators Samson Cherargei (Nandi) and Fatuma Dullo (Isiolo) said redirecting
approved payments is rampant and has led to massive pending bills.
“Some counties don’t even submit their expenditure reports.
I wonder whether the new system will be able to capture such cases,” Cherargei
said.
Mbadi said Treasury is taking the
concerns seriously.
“This is a twin system of approval and payment, meaning
whatever is approved is what gets paid. This will prevent voiding—where you
requisition to pay X but end up paying Y,” he said.
Reports from oversight agencies have indicated that counties
owe more than Sh200 billion to statutory bodies, including KRA, NSSF, Saccos and
pension schemes.
The failure to remit deductions has raised concerns about
the welfare of county employees, particularly in retirement.
“These people who approve and pay for things that haven’t
been authorised are deliberately violating financial procedures. It’s a blatant
abuse,” Mbadi said.
He said he had rejected a request by county
executives to postpone the rollout of the system for at least a year, insisting
that implementation must proceed without delay.
“I was told they need a year to prepare, but I refused. We
must implement it now. The biggest culprits in financial malpractice are county
executives," the CS said.
We have cases of parallel payrolls—some manual, some
automated—and we’re even hearing of ghost workers,” the CS said.
The system, once rolled out, is expected to enhance
accountability, enforce compliance with statutory remittances and curb the
financial indiscipline that continues to plague many county governments.
INSTANT ANALYSIS
A report by the Senate County Public Accounts Committee shows
that the devolved units are not remitting statutory deductions to various
entities, including retirement schemes such as Lapfund and Laptrust, loan
repayment to Saccos, insurance policy deductions and the County Pension Fund. The
committee observed that no remittances of employees’ deductions on time leads
to nugatory expenditure on the part of the county executive in the form of
penalties and interest.