Audio By Carbonatix
Economist, Professor William Baah Boateng, has called on government to holistically revise the country’s pay system as a measure to reducing labour agitations.
According to him, the huge pay disparity between the different tiers of government workers has fuelled the labour discontentment and agitations the country is currently seeing.
He noted that the government’s attempt to address these concerns have rather been stopgap instead of holistic, thus leading to more frequent labour agitations.
His comments come on the back of the recent CLOGSAG strike action where members are demanding that among other things government commences the payment of their neutrality allowances.
Speaking on JoyNews’ PM Express, he said, “I think as a country, we haven’t looked at our pay system holistically. And I say this because we seem to address wage issues in firefighting manner. When we started the single spine in 2010 and everybody will bear me out that the disparity between those on the single spine and other levels were not that much.
“And I always put them in three or four [categories], we have those of us on the single spine, we have those on Article 71, then we have those who are supposed to pay their workers based on what they generate. And then we have others as well.”
“So when you have these differences, and then in 2010 the differences weren’t that much, and from 2013- 2014 you see that the gap began to widen so fast that those on the single spine began to realize that they were not getting what they want and when they compare themselves to others, I think they’re not better or their far far far worse than them.
“Then when the inflation begins to misbehave, then you expect that labour will rise. So I think it’s time government looks at our pay system in a holistic manner and try to see how the inter-equity relativities will be breached so that at least when you have such a situation you will not get the pressure as we have now,” he said.
Prfessor Baah Boateng believes that when these disparities are holistically addressed such that the gap is reduced, even during periods of high inflation as we’re experiencing now, the government will be less burdened with frequent labour agitations.
“But if we’re able to address the pay system holistically, from Article 71 to those who are paid based on their own IDF up to the single spine, then we would be able to know where the problem is and then we would be able to minimize the gap, and that when there is an issue, in terms of inflation going up, those at the bottom will understand that after all we’re not too different from those at the top,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Ocean Harmony Project founder warns plastic pollution is entering the human food chain through fish
9 minutes -
Ghana’s floods are behavioural disasters, not natural ones – Environmental advocates
22 minutes -
Nigeria clinches $10,000 grand prize as 4th ECOWAS Regional Cybersecurity Hackathon 2026 ends in Accra
2 hours -
AGI partners Danish industries to advance value chain sustainability
2 hours -
Missing UCC student found dead as police launch investigations
3 hours -
Aflao border plunged into darkness, exposing travellers to attacks – Union Secretary
3 hours -
ECOWAS unites on minerals, industrialisation to power AfCFTA
3 hours -
Oti House of Chiefs to unveil 7-member committee on Nkwanta South conflict
3 hours -
Be advocates of modern parenting – Adaklu DCE
3 hours -
Ketu North MCE advocates agricultural mechanisation to boost productivity
3 hours -
The Thomas Partey Case: Presumption of innocence, sovereignty and the World Cup
3 hours -
Parents urged not to give away children due to poverty
3 hours -
Konongo crash leaves multiple injured
4 hours -
Book Launch: Political Economy of Institutionalising Monitoring & Evaluation Practice in Africa
4 hours -
Residents protest destruction of sacred Dodowa Forest for interim market
4 hours