Namibia: Nandi-Ndaitwah Flags N$35bn Public Wage Bill As Unsustainable

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President Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah has warned that Namibia’s current public wage bill of more than N$35 billion per year is unsustainable, urging civil servants to embrace innovation, improve service delivery and operate within tightened fiscal limits.

Speaking at the Namibian Institute of Public Administration and Management (Nipam) in Windhoek on Friday, she addressed hundreds of public employees and called for a renewed culture of accountability and purpose across all government institutions.

“We are working under fiscal constraints. The public service wage bill stands at over N$35 billion, serving more than 100 000 employees. This situation is unsustainable,” she said.

Nandi-Ndaitwah stressed that the government should not be the country’s primary employer and instead must create a functioning environment for the private sector to drive job creation.

“Employment is squarely within the domain of the private sector. This is more particular in our system that is based on a mixed economy. Essential change is needed in mindset and in behaviour. This change wagon is already under way,” she said.

Nandi-Ndaitwah reminded public servants of the performance expectations tied to their benefits and condemned misuse of office for self-enrichment.

“Think of the benefits you enjoy as a public servant: a regular monthly salary; access to medical aid (costing the government N$3.62 billion annually); membership in a pension fund; housing and vehicle allowances; career development opportunities; local and international exposure,” she said.