Audio By Carbonatix
Deputy Finance Minister has said the Ministry will be making a proposal to Cabinet to standardise appropriate payment in terms of per diems when public sector workers go on assignments.
Kweku Kwarteng said Cabinet must consider what is legitimate to pay and how much to pay for people who go on workshops and meetings, as things like board and other sitting allowances are increasingly going out of acceptable brackets.
He said the Ministry is awake to these developments and will soon go to cabinet to standardise those payments.
According to him, he has gotten complaints from development partners about what they have had to pay in the form of transport or honorarium, which they are unhappy about.
The member of Parliament's Finance Committee said he has received honorariums from official assignments, which he thinks was on the high side which he said the Ministry is working to correct to save the national purse.
His comments follow Joy FM's expose about the Finance Committee being paid GHC100,000 by the National Lotteries Authority (NLA) to facilitate the speedy passing of the Lotteries Bill last year.
Mr Kwarteng admitted going for the workshop in question but could not remember receiving any payment.

There have been calls for a thorough investigation to get to the bottom of the issue.
Adding his voice to the calls for an independent body to investigate Parliament's latest scandal, anti-corruption crusader, Vitus Azeem says it is important that Ghanaians gives the issue the desired attention as it keeps rearing its ugly head.
He said there is nothing right about condoning it when it keeps soiling the image of parliament.
“These are people that are supposed to be people of high integrity whom we call honourable.They are supposed to be patriotic in passing laws in the interest of the state and nothing should influence them passing any bill or not,” he said.
Mr Azeem disagreed with explanations that the legislators are unfairly criticised considering that what some have described as bribery has a precedent which makes it normal.
“We don’t have to continue when the precedent is wrong. It means institutions without resources that need bills passed are disadvantaged since they cannot afford all that cost for the parliamentarians,” he said.
He believes it is better for an outside body to investigate the recent development, as he does not believe the House investigating itself will do a good job.
“We have seen the executive and judiciary being investigated by Independent bodies, why should parliament be such that they cannot be investigated,” he said criticising the recent Joe Ghartey Committee.
Mr Azeem said no one was convinced by the findings and it is in Parliament’s own interest that an independent body investigates to clear its name.
Latest Stories
-
ZEN Petroleum begins trading on GSE, raises GH¢640m
12 seconds -
Olebu residents fear flooding as gutter expands, bridge weakens
4 minutes -
NPA, Police move to crack down on fuel siphoning after tanker crashes
9 minutes -
Police inefficiencies contribute to gaps in xenophobia response – Governance expert
16 minutes -
OSP is confusing contructive criticism with calls for him to be scrapped – Dafeamekpor
17 minutes -
Telecel DigiTech graduates build ‘smart farm’ to tackle drying farmlands
56 minutes -
Former CSA boss calls for a review of cybersecurity education to close skills gap
59 minutes -
Rosenior sacked by Chelsea after three months in charge
1 hour -
Libya and UAE fuel Sudan war with Colombian mercenaries, reports find
1 hour -
I love the OSP but it has become a costly office with little return – Dafeamekpor
1 hour -
Old Tafo MP Vincent Assafuah distributes 10,000 mathematical sets to BECE candidates
1 hour -
Nearly 8,000 people died or disappeared on migration routes in 2025, IOM says
1 hour -
BoG Governor engages X content creators on service export proceeds
1 hour -
The OSP must stay but must up their game – Dafeamekpor
1 hour -
E Vibes Musical Band Series returns in May to celebrate Ghana’s greatest bands and their untold stories
1 hour