A Ghanaian axiom teaches that those who do not have axes must utilise opportunities offered by those who have them by going along with them into the forest to pick pieces of firewood for lighting their hearths.
Today, public debate is about payments of End-of-Service Benefits (ESBs) to the big shots in government.
This Writer, therefore, takes liberties to put in a plea for public sector workers, who have been complaining silently about a governmental decree that suspended their (ESBs) in the dizzy days of the December 1981 revolution up to today.
Even though ESBs were said to have been restored in principle through the contributory Provident Funds in recent times, it begs the question of equity and fairness, given the low salary levels in the country’s public sector and the many years of deficit for those who have been in public service since the early 1980s.
Once upon a time in 1990 the then Finance Minister Dr Kwesi Botchwey announced the indefinite suspension of all ESBs for Departments and Agencies with Collective Bargaining Agreements (CBAs) and therefore subsisted on the State purse, stating the inability of the State to bear such responsibilities.
At the time, those who had served the minimum number of years for qualification to earn the ESBs as stipulated in their CBAs, were paid those benefits.
In some instances workers who were just one day short of the minimum qualification were denied those benefits.
Those who were paid the (ESBs) for the period that they had qualified but continued in service for many more years went home on retirement without any ESBs. Some of them are still in service and would go home virtually empty handed if the decree should continue in force.
Those who had missed even the partial ESBs as a result of non-qualification by those CBAs would be serving more than 30 years at the time they would be due to retire but would have nothing to show as ESBs.
Ironically, however, those who then and now have been in government continued to enjoy the ESBs even though these might be under different descriptions.
If, therefore, the argument for the indefinite suspension of ESBs in the Public Service as charged on the public purse, was the financial burden entailed, that argument could no longer hold in the face of recent developments.
Our country’s motto is “Freedom and Justice” with emphasis on “Justice”, a case of what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.
It is agreed that each level of public service must be rewarded proportionately but not a complete denial to some and everything for others, it smacks of discrimination and a breach of the 1992 Constitution.
For example Legislators are entitled to ESBs for as many times that they entered Parliament and for the Presidents for a minimum of four years or maximum of eight years compared with other public servants, who serve many more years but would go home empty handed.
One may ask why ESBs? Indeed to this Writer’s understanding, ESBs were meant to achieve various ends. Firstly, but not in order of importance, is to assure the beneficiaries of a secure future after rendering many years of public service.
The package is also meant to ensure loyalty, sacrifice and commitment while in service; giving the best of oneself to the nation.
ESBs also constitute one of the effective ways to tackling pervasive malfeasance in the Public Service.
A public servant who faces a bleak future while in service would when he or she gets the chance succumb to corruption in order to feather his or her nest against a rainy day. It is a natural survival instinct.
To succeed in tackling corrupt practices in public service, the Government would do well by expunging the decree that suspended the ESBs and take on the responsibility for paying those benefits irrespective of the capacity in which one serves in public service.
The reason why contributory Provident Fund cannot replace the ESB, in the form it was prior to 1990 is that, like the contributory Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) pension, what would accrue as benefits to contributors would be woefully adequate given the beggarly wage and salary regime in the country.
Moreover attractive ESBs and by extension salaries constitute potential approaches to addressing the poverty menace in the country.
This is because the fact remains that public sector workers have continued to take on the responsibilities of members of the extended family in terms of education, welfare and many other things that impinge on the quality of life in the society.
The poverty levels in the country are arguably the reflection of poor reward systems in the public sector making it increasingly difficult to bear one another’s burden.
A case for improved public sector reward systems helping to solve problems of poverty had been made in the early post independence period when uncles and aunties took on their nephews and nieces and educated them as far as their abilities could take them and also set some of them up in businesses.
It is accepted that better reward systems in the public sector are attendant on higher productivity but it is also arguable that enhanced reward systems in the sector would be motivation towards higher productivity.
There is also the danger of de-motivation towards higher productivity in the public sector when the oft proclaimed resilience and stable growth of the economy rather than reflect in better rewards instead tended to echo the inability of the economy to offer the expected better rewards.
Credit: Wilhelm Gaitu, GNA
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