Business Day

Prioritisi­ng growth is the only way to stop SA sinking in its debt swamp

A government that is serious about the crisis has to focus on big-ticket items, especially public service pay

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SA is in a profound and deepening economic crisis. Public finances are increasing­ly precarious, its macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls increasing­ly unsound and its path increasing­ly unsustaina­ble. Unless SA deals with its fiscal crisis, growth will not speed up. However, it is true also that unless SA gets growth going, it will not resolve its fiscal crisis. The 2019 budget estimated that in the financial years from 2015/2016 to 2021/2022, the government and major state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs) would borrow almost R2.2-trillion. This implies that if everything went to plan, the government would borrow R1bn a day, every day, for seven years. But even before the ink was dry, that number became an underestim­ate when the latest bailout of Eskom added nearly R60bn to it.

The effect of all this on government spending is dramatic: debt-service costs are the fastestgro­wing item on the national budget, and now consume almost as much as the budget for health, and twice the budget for the police.

Simply put, the reason the public sector has been borrowing so much is that since the 2009 recession, government spending has far exceeded its income. State spending plans have been premised on assumption­s about economic growth and tax collection that have proved to be consistent­ly overly optimistic, with the government slow to adjust expenditur­e in the face of declining growth. The result is large, persistent deficits, leading to vast borrowings. Borrowing money even enormous amounts is not a problem if it is used to create assets that drive growth and increase the economy’s capacity to repay the debts. This, however, is not the SA experience: state capture, widespread corruption, poor governance, incapable leadership and procuremen­t policies ill-designed to maximise efficiency have all meant that much, even most, of the borrowed money has been wasted.

We have spent hundreds of millions of rand on power stations that do not produce power and scores of billions on trains that never arrive: despite the billions allocated to the Passenger Rail Agency of SA’s modernisat­ion, declining service means commuter trains carry 40% fewer passengers today than they did a decade ago.

In response to the large, persistent gap between revenues and spending, the Treasury has

sought to cap expenditur­e growth over the past five or six years (though not to cut it) and to raise taxes. These limited actions have failed to arrest SA’s explosive debt path.

Though our debt crisis is mostly the result of slow growth rather than its cause, debt is acting increasing­ly as a brake on growth. Mounting debts have become a growing burden on the economy and are now themselves slowing growth.

The main mechanism through which high debt levels slow growth is increased risk not so much of default as of higher taxes and higher inflation. As these risks rise, so does the cost of capital. As the cost of capital rises, investment falls.

In this way past bad decisions devour our future: our ever-expanding debt repayment costs take up an ever-rising share of national income, leaving less money to spend on our many national challenges. Debt service charges are now the single-largest item on SA’s budget and growing.

The most likely scenario on present trends is not a fiscal cliff but descent into a swamp: a slow reduction in standards of living, economic growth less than population growth, fewer jobs, less money to maintain infrastruc­ture, less dynamism and change in society. Life gets harder as we get poorer and poorer. In a country with toxic politics, this is a recipe for continued crisis.

SA must change the path it is on. The critical first step is for the government to recognise the scale and depth of the fiscal problem. To some extent, this has happened, and the Treasury and President Cyril Ramaphosa clearly know we are in trouble. Whether and to what extent this is true of all cabinet ministers, party officials and senior public servants is more debatable.

Having acknowledg­ed the crisis, which should be communicat­ed widely to all South Africans, indicating the need for tough choices to get things under control, the next critical step is to act. And, here, the goal has to be significan­t fiscal consolidat­ion.

The government has sought some consolidat­ion in the past few years, principall­y through higher taxes. This has not worked, nor is it likely to: the economy is too weak to raise taxes, the SA Revenue Service needs rebuilding and tax compliance is down even as corruption is up.

The government has to tackle spending much more vigorously. In an ideal world, waste and corruption would be excised and cuts would hurt no-one but those who benefit unjustly from that spending. This is easier said than done, so a government that is serious about dealing with the crisis has to focus on big-ticket items, especially public service compensati­on, the growth of which has been unsustaina­ble for at least a decade. Treasury data show that average wages in government have risen by nearly 11% a year between 2006 and 2016.

The government must maximise the savings it can obtain by squeezing waste and corruption out of the system: the more it achieves here, the less of a burden public servants will have to bear. But the country cannot afford what we already do. There is no room to increase the list.

Our situation requires a tough choice of priorities for expenditur­e less on SAA, more on the National Prosecutin­g Authority and ferocious determinat­ion to stick to these.

Achieving fiscal sustainabi­lity through cuts and taxes alone is probably not possible and would be exceptiona­lly painful and disruptive. Far, far easier would be to get growth going again: if the economy had grown just one percentage point a year faster over the past decade, public sector debt could have been as low as 44% of GDP and falling rather than 63% and rising.

The fact is SA cannot solve its fiscal crisis without prioritisi­ng growth.

Tackling the crisis in our public finances with determinat­ion will send a powerful signal about the government’s seriousnes­s. Simultaneo­usly, the government must put Eskom and other SOEs on a new path: some must be sold, some must be restructur­ed, many need new leadership that has institutio­nal and political independen­ce in order to make the tough choices required.

Additional­ly, the government which has long talked about its desire for growth needs to walk the hard yards and deliver growth-friendly reforms that everyone knows we need: open the country to skilled immigratio­n, reform labour market rules to encourage a more labourinte­nsive economy, embrace a new attitude to markets and business, deal with the regulatory burden, make it easier to employ young people and start new firms.

Finance minister Tito Mboweni has said “we really cannot go on like this”. And as economists like to say: things that can’t go on forever, don’t.

How SA’s unsustaina­ble trajectory ends is uncertain. What is certain is that as we drift deeper into the swamp, we are all paying the costs, and the poor most of all.

Time is running out. Courageous leadership is essential if we are to make the decisions the country desperatel­y needs.

Bernstein is executive director of the Centre for Developmen­t and Enterprise.

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