Ministerial Handbook costs nearly R1 billion per year: DA introduces Cut Cabinet Perks Bill
3 May 2023
“The DA’s Cut Cabinet Perks Bill will regulate the Ministerial Handbook; compel the President to immediately review the Handbook and subsequently review it every five years; compel the President to conduct proper costing, consider the economic environment, and obtain recommendations from the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers before proposing any benefits, perks and tools of trade for Ministers and Deputy Ministers; compel the President to transparently report proposed changes to benefits to Parliament; and empower Parliament to approve or reject any perks for the President, Deputy President, Ministers and Deputy Ministers.”
The DA has officially tabled our Cut Cabinet Perks Bill in Parliament. The full text of the Bill can be accessed here.
The Bill, which introduces a range of amendments to the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers Act, is designed to rein in the obscene waste of valuable public resources that currently goes towards funding the Rockstar lifestyles of the 30 ANC Ministers and 34 Deputy Ministers. According to the data collected through a series of DA parliamentary questions, South African taxpayers are forced to pay close to R1 billion every year to fund perks such as VIP security, support staff, luxury vehicles, as well as free water and electricity for Cabinet cadres. This is in addition to the respective R2.4 million and R2 million annual salaries Ministers and Deputy Ministers are paid.
Over the past six months, the DA has collected information on how much different perks contained in the Ministerial Handbook cost South African taxpayers. Our research has revealed the following main expenses: