Breakdown: Govt Increases Civil Servants' Salaries By Up To Ksh3,000

The civil servants will also be subjected to a higher house allowance.

Breakdown: Govt Increases Civil Servants' Salaries By Up To Ksh3,000
Public Service Commission Headquarters, Nairobi. /PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION

The government has increased the salaries of civil servants backdated to July 1, 2024, and the increment ranging from Ksh1,000 to Ksh3,000.

In a circular signed by Public Service Principal Secretary Amos Gathecha, the civil servants will also be subjected to a higher house allowance.

Per the new structure, which covers the second phase of the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA), the lowest cadre within the civil service, whose current pay is Ksh16,910, will take home an increased pay of Ksh18,250.

Furthermore, those earning Ksh19,220 per month will now bag an increase of up to Ksh20,560 effective July 1, 2024, an increase of Ksh1,340.

Public Service Cabinet Secretary Justin Muturi while addressing the media on September 3, 2024. /JUSTIN MUTURI

As per a deal brokered between Public Service Cabinet Secretary Justin Muturi and workers' union representatives who had earlier threatened to go on strike, government employees taking home Ksh23,700 will also see changes in their payslips.

The increment has also been affected for the higher job groups. Civil servants earning Ksh102,860 per month will now take home Ksh105,570, a difference of Ksh2,710.

Those who were beforehand earning Ksh125,630 will now take home Ksh127,340 every month, a difference of Ksh1,710.

Muturi who spoke to the press on Tuesday, September 3, assured disgruntled workers that the government would implement the new wage structure in line with the second phase of its Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA).

Muturi while addressing the matter, called on the civil servants to exercise patience as the government intensified its efforts to ensure seamless payment.

According to the former Attorney General, he had already convened a meeting with the National Treasury during which the exchequer agreed to disburse the funds.

“The National Treasury has agreed to provide resources for the payment of civil servants' salaries as per the terms contained in the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA),” Muturi assured the workers, adding “Indeed, I wish to thank the National Treasury for seeing to it that this agreement is honoured.”

Following the deliberations, the CS called on the Kenya Civil Service Union (KCSU) to withdraw the strike notice it issued on Monday, September 2, threatening to demonstrate after the government failed to heed to its promise.

KCSU had threatened to down tools by the end of this month should the government fail to fulfil all the terms reached in the CBA.

Meanwhile, Muturi's Labour counterpart, Alfred Mutua, boldly promised Kenyan workers that they would be subject to an increase in their minimum wages, declaring that a proposed 6% minimum wage increase would be implemented before the end of 2024.

Mutua made the declaration after a meeting with stakeholders including the Federation of Kenya Employers (FKE) at his office on September 3. 

"I want to reassure all Kenyan workers that the proposed 6% minimum wage increase will be implemented before the end of the year after productive discussions with key stakeholders," Mutua stated.

Adding "I will personally visit various workplaces to assess the treatment of employees, ensuring that occupational health standards are met."

A gathering of County government workers. /KENYA COUNTY GOVERNMENT WORKERS UNION