Taxpayers To Foot Sh1.1bn Bill For President Ruto's Top Advisers

10 Days(s) Ago    👁 46
What you need to know:
  • The advisers have been deeply involved in executive decisions, notably those touching on economic policy as Kenya models its presidential advisory role on the United States.
  • The rationale is that in presidential systems that Kenya adopted under the 2010 Constitution, the President sits at the apex of policy-making, and therefore his advisers need to have executive roles.
  • The cost of maintaining a coterie of President William Rutos advisers will cross the Sh1 billion mark, underlining the burden of hiring consultants in government.

    Budget documents tabled in Parliament show that the six advisory units will spend Sh1.14 billion in the year starting July, up from Sh977 million in the current fiscal year.

    The high-profile advisers, including Dr David Ndii, Mr Henry Rotich and Dr Monica Juma, will splurge the bulk of the hundreds of millions on salaries, travel and entertainment.

    This emerges in an era where the State is racing to cut unnecessary expenditure, such as trips abroad by officials and hospitality spending, to rein in a gaping fiscal deficit.

    The advice-givers and their support staff will consume Sh759 million on pay, travel and entertainment, shining the spotlight on the outsized role of advisers under the Ruto presidency relative to his predecessorsUhuru Kenyatta and Mwai Kibaki.

    While the string of advisers under Kenyatta and Kibaki preferred to operate in the shadows of Cabinet Secretaries and Principal Secretaries, the consultants attached to Ruto have been overt and influential, with Dr Ndii being the poster boy of the realignment.

    This battery of advisers, with their offices domiciled at State House, wield incredibly huge influence on policy-making, yet they only answer to one person: President Ruto.

    The advisers have been deeply involved in executive decisions, notably those touching on economic policy as Kenya models its presidential advisory role on the United States.

    The rationale is that in presidential systems that Kenya adopted under the 2010 Constitution, the President sits at the apex of policy-making, and therefore his advisers need to have executive roles.

    But this has come with an additional burden to taxpayers the six advisory units will blow Sh280.5 million in salaries and perks for the year starting July, up from the current Sh207.8 million, reflecting a 35 per cent jump.

    The budget for the advisers sits under the policy analysis and research unit of State House, whose allocation has grown more than tenfold, from Sh87.2 million in the last year of Mr Kenyattas presidency, to the current Sh977 million.

    Mr Kenyatta had a loose advisory arrangement with the budget for his advisers such as Prof Mutahi Ngunyi not clearly spelt out in State financial statements.

    Under Dr Ruto, three of the six advisory units that deal with the management of the economyoffice of economic transformation, council of economic advisers and fiscal affairs and budget policyaccount for more than half of the budget.

    Dr Ndii is the chair of the Presidential Council of economic advisers, the most prominent and influential player among the six.

    Its other members are prominent investment banker Mohammed Hassan and Dr Nancy Laibuni, formerly of the Kenya Institute for Public Policy Research and Analysis (Kippra), a leading policy research and analysis group.

    Aside from salaries, Dr Ndiis team has been allocated Sh194.5 million for the year starting July. They will spend Sh88 million on travel, Sh23 million on entertainment and Sh9.4 million on communication items like mobile phones and airtime.

    Dr Ndii has pushed for budget cuts, especially on non-essential items in Kenyas quest to attain a balanced budget in the next three years.

    Kenya has in the past decade been running wide fiscal deficits to fund a range of ambitious infrastructure projects, but the stance nearly backfired when markets started to question the government's ability to repay the debts.

    Apart from cutting spending and reducing the budget deficit, Dr Ruto's government, which took office in 2022, has also been introducing new taxes, angering some individuals and groups who have challenged the tax measures in court.

    Apart from the council, Mr Rotich, who has served at the National Treasury for six years as Cabinet Secretary, occupies the position of senior adviser and head of the office of fiscal affairs and budget policy.

    Mr Rotich was tapped to the position in February after the courts terminated his graft suit, which saw him hounded out of office on accusations of fraud involving Sh63 billion tenders for two dams.

    His office has been allocated Sh100 million, with travel consuming Sh41 million.

    These advisers have not only been responsible for the Presidents recent love affairs with econ-speak, but they have also played a major role in crafting an