Moi University Initiates Staff Layoffs to Curb Sh10 Billion Debt Crisis

HeadlineMoi University Initiates Staff Layoffs to Curb Sh10 Billion Debt Crisi

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Moi University has launched a fresh staff rationalisation plan involving massive workforce layoffs to rescue the cash-strapped public institution from a crippling Sh10 billion debt and technical insolvency

Acting Vice-Chancellor Prof. Kiplagat Kotut officially announced the major restructuring decision on Thursday during an operational briefing with the National Assembly Committee on Education at Continental House in Nairobi. The management explained that the drastic down-sizing follows over a decade of severe financial distress. A parallel drop in student enrollment from 40,000 to 12,000 learners drastically crippled internal revenues, making operational sustainability impossible under the current bloated payroll structure.

The public institution currently spends Sh383 million monthly on personnel costs, an immense financial amount that consumes 81 percent of its total revenue. Chief Internal Auditor Gabriel Ogutu told lawmakers that the university remains entirely unable to honor its basic financial obligations, rendering it legally and technically insolvent [n385684]. The accumulated liabilities include Sh8 billion in unremitted statutory deductions, pension contributions, and outstanding bank loans.”The university is technically insolvent,” Ogutu stated during the parliamentary session.

Moi University Initiates Staff Layoffs to Curb Sh10 Billion Debt CrisisMoi University has launched a fresh staff rationalisation plan involving massive workforce layoffs to rescue the cash-strapped public institution from a crippling Sh10 billion debt and technical insolvency. Acting Vice-Chancellor Prof. Kiplagat Kotut officially announced the major restructuring decision on Thursday during an operational briefing with the National Assembly Committee on Education at Continental House in Nairobi.

The management explained that the drastic down-sizing follows over a decade of severe financial distress. A parallel drop in student enrollment from 40,000 to 12,000 learners drastically crippled internal revenues, making operational sustainability impossible under the current bloated payroll structure. The public institution currently spends Sh383 million monthly on personnel costs, an immense financial amount that consumes 81 percent of its total revenue.

Chief Internal Auditor Gabriel Ogutu told lawmakers that the university remains entirely unable to honor its basic financial obligations, rendering it legally and technically insolvent. The accumulated liabilities include Sh8 billion in unremitted statutory deductions, pension contributions, and outstanding bank loans. “The university is technically insolvent,” Ogutu stated during the parliamentary session. “We must thin it down and let go of the excesses to match our human resources with the actual student workload.”The redundancy roadmap comes exactly a year after the Employment and Labour Relations Court blocked a previous attempt by the university to dismiss 900 employees, citing a lack of meaningful union consultations.

To comply with these strict legal directives, the administration is now conducting a comprehensive workforce workload analysis before issuing formal redundancy notices to both academic and non-academic staff.Committee Chairperson Julius Melly commended the university for restoring some academic stability but demanded full transparency throughout the restructuring process. The lawmakers directed the management board to submit a detailed accountability report and a clear implementation framework within the coming weeks.

The Ministry of Education previously offered partial financial relief through conditional grants, but the university relies heavily on a requested multi-billion shilling state bailout to finish its stalled infrastructure projects, including a Sh4.5 billion science complex. The financial trajectory of Kenya’s second-oldest public university now depends entirely on the upcoming executive funding decisions and the response of staff unions. This financial crisis reflects a broader systemic issue affecting several other public universities across the nation, forcing stakeholders to actively seek sustainable higher education financing models.

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