Kingdom Council of Ministers withdraws salary discount condition for Curaçao, Aruba and Sint Maarten | News item

News item | 27-01-2023 | 3:30 pm

The condition of a 12.5% ​​discount on the salaries of the countries Curaçao, Aruba and Sint Maarten is withdrawn. This has been decided by the Kingdom Council of Ministers. The discounts were one of the conditions for the countries Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten to receive Corona liquidity support from the Netherlands.

In 2020, the countries appealed to the Netherlands for financial assistance. As a result of the Covid pandemic, a large part of government and business income had disappeared. The discount amounted to 12.5% ​​for employees in the (semi) public sector and 25% for political office holders and applied to the total package of employment conditions. The cuts made an important contribution to reducing the financial deficit that had arisen and the public sector showed solidarity with the private sector, which was severely affected by the covid pandemic.

The pandemic has now passed its peak and tourism on the islands is showing a strong recovery. This could allow government revenues to return to pre-pandemic levels in 2023. The Board of (Aruba) Financial Supervision has advised the Kingdom Council of Ministers that it will again be possible for the countries to meet the budget standards in 2023. As a result, the countries will not appeal to the Netherlands for new liquidity support and can absorb the reduction in their own budgets . Another condition was the standardization of top incomes in the (semi) public sector. This is now regulated by law in all three countries.

State Secretary Van Huffelen of the Interior and Kingdom Relations: “I am pleased that the countries have created the space for phasing out the discounts, because this will bring the incomes of, for example, employees in important sectors such as healthcare and education back to the level they were before. the pandemic. This is especially important because the sharp rise in inflation as a result of the war in Ukraine is also being felt in the Caribbean part of our Kingdom. In combination with the salary cuts, purchasing power was severely affected. This mainly affects the lowest incomes and can now be partly reversed.”

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