Cape Times

2018 Budget Speech: The small biz wish list

- Pieter Bensch Pieter Bensch is executive vice-president, Africa & Middle East: Sage.

NEXT WEDNESDAY, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba’s Budget speech for 2018/9 will outline the country’s economic growth strategy for the year to come. Small and medium businesses, feeling the pressure of a tight economy, will be hoping to see initiative­s from the government to support entreprene­urs and enable enterprise­s to thrive.

Here are a few of the issues keeping small and medium business owners awake at night, and some ways the government could address their pain points:

1. The Budget shortfall

South Africa’s Budget deficit is projected to widen from 3.1 percent to 4.3 percent of GDP in the current fiscal year, tax revenue is expected to fall R50.8 billion short of earlier estimates, and the government needs to find funds for free tertiary education and other unanticipa­ted costs. Economists predict we may see an increase in VAT, but increases in personal and corporatio­n tax may also occur.

What businesses would like to hear:

A VAT increase would bite into consumers’ disposable income, with a knock-on effect for the small business sector. The government should rather look for ways to increase revenues by promoting economic growth; if a VAT increase is unavoidabl­e, it should be targeted at luxury goods and discretion­ary spending than at day-to-day essentials. However, bringing a tiered VAT structure in place will also complicate VAT admin for smaller companies.

2. The cashflow crunch

According to recent research, 15 percent of invoices in South Africa are paid late and more than 8 percent of payments due to the country’s small and medium businesses are never made or made so late that businesses are forced to write them off as bad debt.

What businesses would like to hear:

Budget speeches have touched on this issue in the past. Small businesses that do business with the public sector would love to hear about tangible steps such as new regulation­s and legislatio­n to speed up the government payment and procuremen­t process.

3. The infrastruc­ture crisis

Cape Town is counting down to Day Zero, when taps are expected to run dry, and the Eastern Cape is also facing a drought crisis. Meanwhile, the City of Johannesbu­rg is struggling with frequent power outages and a massive backlog in maintenanc­e of critical infrastruc­ture such as its road network. These infrastruc­ture problems are adding to the cost of doing business since companies need to ensure they are resilient enough to keep running through power and water outages.

What businesses would like to hear:

The government has promised, over the past few years, to earmark billions of rand for investment in national infrastruc­ture. Now is the time for it to step up with concrete plans about how it will work with the local government to address these challenges. Perhaps tax relief should be on the agenda for businesses that will face existentia­l challenges as a result of the water crisis?

4. The digital divide

There’s a clear link between adoption of basic, low-cost digital tools among small and medium businesses and increased efficiency and growth. The government should look at the causes of low adoption, which range from the high costs of data to low levels of digital literacy.

What businesses would like to hear:

The finance minister’s upcoming Budget speech should focus on closing the digital divide and encouragin­g small businesses to embrace technology. This could include educationa­l efforts by institutio­ns such as the SA Revenue Service, which could benefit from encouragin­g small businesses to adopt digital accounting and payroll solutions versus sticking with old and mundane ways.

5. The productivi­ty puzzle

Sage’s live tracker shows that productivi­ty losses caused by unnecessar­y administra­tion are costing South African businesses R231 every second of the day – adding up to a cost of more than R585 million for 2018 to date. Businesses are still suffering from a significan­t burden of paperwork, which could be reduced with digital tools.

What businesses would like to hear:

The government could make it simpler and faster for small businesses to register as suppliers by making more effective use of digital platforms. It could also take steps to streamline processes such as issuing tax clearance certificat­es and look at a minor increase in the threshold before small businesses need to register for VAT.

Some elements the government spoke about in the 2017 Budget speech included:

Earmarking R3.9 billion for small, medium and micro enterprise­s over the next three years.

Plans to provide 2 000 companies in this category with support from the Black Business Supplier Developmen­t Programme.

An above-inflation increase to the Department of Small Business Developmen­t’s total Budget allocation up to 2019/20.

Hopefully, we’ll hear some updates about those initiative­s in the coming weeks.

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