July 3, 2024

Inside President Ruto’s KSh200bn Supplementary Budget

2 min read
Inside President Ruto's KSh200bn Supplementary Budget

Ruto signed KSh200bn supplementary budget with more than Sh60 provided for government pending bills

Ruto signed KSh200bn supplementary budget with more than Sh60 provided for government pending bills.

Speaking when he assented to the Supplementary Appropriation Bill (National Assembly Bill No. 4 of 2023) on Monday at State House, President William Ruto said the move will ensure uninterrupted delivery of services to the people.

The Bill gives authority for the issuance of Sh200.7 Billion out of the Consolidated Fund and apply it towards the supply granted for the service of the year ending this June.

It includes provisions for capitation for students entering junior secondary school, recruitment of additional teachers and improvement of school infrastructure as well as additional provisions for school feeding.

According to the Bill, the recruitment of additional teachers will absorb Sh6 Billion, school feeding under National Council for Nomadic Education Sh2 billion, drought mitigation Sh10 Billion, and fertiliser subsidy Sh15 Billion.

The President said the country’s food security requires long-term and sustainable solutions.

China responds after Kenyan government reopens China Square 

Central Bank directs commercial banks to ration dollars following a shortage 

KRA introduces real-time tax spying software

“That is why the supplementary estimates have funded a wide range of interventions such as the expansion of irrigation systems,” he said.

Present in the ceremony were Attorney General Justin Muturi, Speaker of the National Assembly Moses Wetang’ula, National Assembly Majority Leader Kimani Ichungw’ah and Kiharu MP Ndindi Nyoro who is also the Chairperson of the Budget and Appropriations Committee.

The President noted that the Bill has reduced the supply by Sh143.7 Billion to the various votes, which will play a critical role in stimulating economic performance.

In what signals the Government’s commitment to debt reduction through expenditure rationalization, the fiscal deficit has decreased from 6.2 percent of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in initial estimates to 5.7 percent of GDP.

Also read,

Report reveals how two communities dominate top cadre jobs in state agencies

Kenya spent K Sh2.5 trillion on costly imports

How the government lost KSh34bn in months on fuel subsidy- Report

Follow us

FaceBook

Telegram

error: Content is protected !!