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The decision by the Minister of Public Service and Administration, Ayanda Dlodlo, to award a R3 billion salary increase for millionaire managers in the Public Service is an insult to the private sector and the more than 10 million unemployed South Africans. This latest salary increase, following a R30 billion salary increase for lower levels of the public service last year, deals the death blow to years of empty promises by President Cyril Ramaphosa’s government that it would freeze the public sector wage bill to avert a full-blown debt crisis.
Just days after telling South Africans that “it is the private sector, rather than the government, that creates jobs,” Ramaphosa’s administration has taken R3 billion in taxpayer money out of the pockets of the private sector and handed it over to the very millionaire cadres who ran both the state and economy into the ground. Even with unemployment at its highest ever rate of 46%, and after two years of lockdowns that destroyed millions of livelihoods, Ramaphosa’s government continues to place its political interests ahead of the needs of the country by spending R3 billion in taxpayer money to buy support for the upcoming ANC elective congress from ANC cadres “deployed” into senior management service (SMS) positions.
This unaffordable increase entails a pensionable cash allowance of R1 695 for salary levels 13 to 15, R1 818 for salary level 16, and a salary adjustment of 1,5% – all backdated to April 2021.
The salary increase paid to the 712 highest paid millionaire managers (level 16) in the public service and backdated to April 2021 will cost South Africans over R312 million. This amounts to a pay-out of over R439 000 per person. In total, the 11 305 highest paid cadres in the ANC-captured state will take R3 billion out of the pockets of the people, who will undoubtedly be forced to pay for it through higher taxes.
As recently as December 2020, the Labour Court noted that further salary increases would not be just and equitable because it would “expend significant and scarce financial resources on employees whose jobs are already secured and salaries have been paid in full, particularly in circumstances where the imperative exists for the recovery of the economy to the benefit of millions of vulnerable people.”
After two years of further lockdown and corruption devastation, this rings even more true today than it did in December 2020. And in the wake of his undertaking in SONA to put the private sector first, this is a grave betrayal of South Africa’s hardworking private sector workers and job creators.
In response, the DA will submit an application in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act (PAIA) to ascertain whether all legal requirements were met before this outrageous increase was announced.
The calculations based on a parliamentary reply on salary distribution in the public service that the DA received in October 2021, with the breakdown are Attached.
Issued by DA Shadow Minister for Public Service and Administration, Dr Leon Schreiber MP
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