Senior Vice President of IMANI Africa, Kofi Bentil says the unrest in the labour sector is the doing of government.
The lawyer, who was speaking on the issue of disparity between Article 71 officeholders and Single-Spine workers, said the country has failed when it comes to “dealing with public sector wages over time”.
Speaking on JoyNews’ Newsfile, he said none of the problems caused can be attributed to public sector workers.
“Zero of the problems are with the public and civil servant. All the problems are with the leaders. When you employ somebody, the person’s wage is not a net loss to you because the person helps you to make more money than you pay them.”
“So if you take the civil and public servants, the government workers, whatever we’re paying them, if they were producing well enough, it will not be a net loss to you, it won’t be a problem, it will be a fraction of what they’re making,” he said.
Mr. Bentil argued that politicians and government officials are “messing up” the public sector.
He said proof of the above was the fact that workers from the public sector work efficiently when they are in the private sector than they do in the public sector.
“The public sector has about three times more qualifications than the private sector. And whenever they move, whether to international organizations or into the private sector, they produce massively. So why don’t they get the same levels of productivity when they’re in the civil and public service?
“It’s because of the leadership and the political messing up of that space. It’s because people are appointing political misfits into office. It is simply because the leadership there is poor at every level.”
He reiterated that the country should not blame the public sector workers for low productivity.
Public sector workers have been raising concerns over the huge gap between the salaries of Article 71 officeholders and Single-Spine workers.
By 2016, the difference between average salary earners of these two groups amounted to ₵17,088 with single spine workers taking as low as 1,128 as against Article 71 holder's 18,211.
In view of this, organized labour recently rejected a proposal of 18% salary increment.
The group which consists of unions such as; GNAT, CLOGSAG and TUC stated that they will not accept any increment less than 60% although they are demanding a 65% increment.
Latest Stories
-
‘It’s unfortunate we had to protect the public purse from Akufo-Addo’ – Ablakwa on ORAL Team’s mission
33 minutes -
Congo lawyers say Apple’s supply chain statement must be verified
59 minutes -
Stampede in southwestern Nigerian city causes multiple deaths
1 hour -
Tens of thousands without water in Mayotte as curfew brought in
2 hours -
ORAL: We won’t witch-hunt, we’ll focus on transparency, not revenge – Ablakwa
2 hours -
Attempted robbery: Accused claims he carried cutlass for protection
2 hours -
Excavator operator jailed for stealing
3 hours -
African fans age-shame me for putting on some outfits – Tiwa Savage
3 hours -
Tiwa Savage criticised by female fans for stance on cheating in relationships
3 hours -
Bank of England expected to hold interest rates
3 hours -
Congo river boat sinks killing at least 22
3 hours -
Nigeria approves Shell’s $2.4 billion asset sale to Renaissance
4 hours -
Embattled Liberian speaker questioned by police over parliament fire
4 hours -
‘I won’t be a judge in my own court; ORAL is about protecting public purse’ – Ablakwa
5 hours -
Bawumia joins thousands in Kumasi for burial prayers for Ashanti Regional Imam
5 hours