The move came after the government lost millions of South Sudanese pounds to ghost names.
Government spokesman and information minister Michael Makuei Lueth said if an electronic payroll system comes into effect, it will assist the government to get rid of ghost workers by automating the payrolls.
“Electronic payroll system, this is the computerized paying system whereby people are paid through the computer system, and the names are computerized, it’s another way of fighting this duplication of names and payment of ghost names,” Makuei told journalists following an extraordinary council of ministers sitting held in Juba on Wednesday.
“There are so many people who could be working in different places and getting paid at the same time from all over,” Makuei added.
The government spokesman revealed that the management of the system will be funded and supervised by an expert to be hired by the World Bank.
“It is the World Bank which will be funding it and it will be funding payroll coordinator and payroll coordinator will be appointed and it is the World Bank that will be paying him,” he said.
He disclosed that the government will be contributing 800,000 U.S dollars annually for the maintenance and management of payroll systems.
“What is required from us is to pay the sum of 800,000 U.S dollars annually for the maintenance which is currently available up to the time when biometric.”