The Salaries
and Remuneration Commission has four years to lead a drastic reduction of
the soaring public wage bill, which hit an all-time high of Sh1.24 trillion in
the 2024-25 spending period.
The
High Court, in a judgment on Friday, gave the commission four and a half years to
achieve the legally prescribed ceiling of 35 per cent of national revenue.
Justice Lawrence Mugambi in a ruling declared that the continued
violation of wage bill limits by national and county governments
undermines economic growth, stifles development and breaches the constitutional
rights of ordinary Kenyans.
If implemented, could spell doom for the 1.2 million public servants, either in
job or significant pay cuts, especially allowances.
The
judgment followed a constitutional petition filed by Eliud Matindi in August
2023, challenging the SRC’s decision to review and increase remuneration for
state officers for the 2023-24 and 2024-25 financial years.
While
the court dismissed several of Matindi’s claims, including that public
participation was inadequate and that backdating salary increases was unlawful,
it firmly upheld his argument that the country’s public wage bill has
persistently and illegally exceeded fiscal sustainability limits.
Citing
data presented during the Third National Wage Bill Conference in April 2024,
Justice Mugambi noted the wage bill to revenue ratio stood at 54.77 per
cent in 2020-21, 47.06 per cent in 2021-22 and was projected at 46.64 per
cent in 2022-23.
The
numbers are far above the 35 per cent cap set by the Public Finance Management
Act and its regulations.
“There
is no equity in a nation whose population is over 50 million but half of its
total revenue is gobbled up by just over a million public and state officers,”
Justice Mugambi stated in his ruling.
He
emphasised that such excessive spending directly contravenes constitutional
principles of equitable development, sustainable growth and the state’s
obligation to provide healthcare, education, housing, food and social security
to all citizens.
“Spending
half of total revenue on remuneration for a tiny fraction of the population is
a breach of the principles of public finance,” the judge said.
As
part of the orders issued by the court, the SRC is now required to file annual
affidavits starting June 30, 2026.
The
affidavits should detail time-bound strategies, collaborative measures with
stakeholders, advisories issued to curb allowance abuses and progress made in
reducing the wage bill ratio.
The
court also declared that any national or county government budget exceeding the
35 per cent wage bill limit is unconstitutional and void.
The
nullity will, however, only take effect from July 1, 2030, to allow a
transitional period for compliance.
Further,
the judgment mandates that all public sector employers, including national and
county governments, state corporations and public universities, must seek and
obtain advice from the SRC before implementing any remuneration increases or
collective bargaining agreements that could raise the public compensation bill.
While
this has been the standard practice, some entities have been flagged for
bypassing SRC in salary adjustments.
A
separate court recently held that it is mandatory for all state agencies,
including Parliament and the Public Service Commission, to run all salary-related issues through SRC.
The Public
Service Commission has, over time, fought SRC’s attempt to regulate the salaries of
all civil servants, including teachers.
SRC
currently wants its mandate expanded to set salaries for teachers, port workers,
and members of Cotu-affiliated institutions.
The
ruling represents a significant judicial intervention into the country’s
long-standing struggle with an unsustainable public wage bill, which has
crowded out development expenditure and contributed to rising public debt.
For
instance, in the current financial year, with salaries taking up Sh1.2 trillion,
and debt repayment gobbling another Sh1.1 trillion, the exchequer is left with
not enough money for development.
This
is considering that spending by ministries on day-to-day operations amounts to about
Sh2 trillion.
The
situation is getting worse, with projections showing the 2026-27 budget will have a deficit of more than Sh130 billion after the discretionary expenditures.
During
court proceedings, the SRC acknowledged the problem but argued it cannot solve
it alone, calling for multi-stakeholder support.
Justice
Mugambi, however, stressed the commission holds a central constitutional
mandate to ensure fiscal sustainability in public remuneration.
The
judgment has been welcomed by governance and economic analysts, who see it as a
critical step towards restoring fiscal discipline and redirecting resources to
essential public services and development projects.
“It's not lost on me that I used a report
authored by Ndii in 2004 to support my argument that SRC was violating the
constitution by setting the remunerations and benefits for state officers at a
ridiculously high level,” Matindi, the petitioner, said.
President William Ruto's economic adviser David Ndii fired back, saying, “It is more ironic
than you think. The mandate of the SRC is drawn directly from the recommendations
of that report [which Francis Muthaura resisted by the way]. The misfortune of
my engagement by CoE seven years later is how SRC came into Chapter 12 of the
Constitution.”