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Kenya: Ministries to Cut Spend On Foreign Travel, Training in Ruto’s Austerity Plan

by kenya-tribune
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Nairobi — Ministries, Departments, and Agencies(MDAs) are set to fully cut spending on foreign travel, purchase of motor vehicles, and training in the current budget as part of President William Ruto’s Sh300billion austerity plan.

The MDAs will also be required to fully cut spending on the remaining allocated funds for purchase of household furniture and institutional equipment, purchase of office furniture and general equipment, and refurbishment of buildings.

The Treasury in its revision of the estimates of expenditure and revenues for the financial year 2022/23 has also directed the MDAs to effect a 75 per cent cut in spending on domestic travel, communication services, advertising and printing, hospitality, and vehicle rentals.

Other areas to be affected by the 75 per cent cuts are contracted professional services, routine maintenance – vehicles and other transport equipment, fuel oil and lubricants, research, feasibility studies, project preparation and design among others.

According to Treasury CS Njuguna Ndung’u, financing challenges as well as emerging expenditure pressures have made the government see a need to realign and reprioritize spending within a sustainable fiscal framework.

“In this regard, the National Treasury is in the process of rationalizing expenditures and mobilizing revenues to achieve a deficit financing target of 5.7 per cent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP),” Ndung’u said.

Further, the Treasury has proposed that all MDAs remove all new projects; rationalize projects with implementation challenges; review counterpart funds and scale down on externally funded projects with absorption between 60 to 65 per cent.

The revision of spending is being undertaken in accordance with Article 223 of the Constitution and Section 44 of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA), 2012

Further, as part of the plan, accounting Officers will be required to critically review the expenditure requirements for up to December 31, 2022 and retain items likely to be spent before the approval of the Supplementary Estimates.

“Accounting Officers should ensure that only approved additional expenditures by the National Treasury are reflected in the Supplementary Estimates No. 1 for the FY2022/23. In doing so, they should provide supporting evidence for the approved additional expenditures,” said Ndung’u.