Cape Times

Godongwana could dip into SA’s foreign currency reserves

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

ECONOMISTS have warned that Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana might have to dip into the country's foreign currency reserves – amounting in total to around R500 billion – to raise additional revenue to shore up the fiscus instead of tax hikes.

Market participan­ts have raised the option of using the unrealised gains from the revaluatio­n of gold and foreign exchanges to either cover redemption­s on maturing government debt or to finance government expenditur­e. This comes as Godongwana this week will table the 2024 Budget Review in Parliament amid a pivotal election cycle, possibly the most significan­t since South Africa's democratic elections in 1994.

Current fiscal indicators show gross tax revenue falling short by an estimated R55bn to R60bn compared to projection­s outlined in the 2023 Budget Review. Pricewater­houseCoope­rs (PwC) South Africa last week projected that Godongwana could possibly announce an increase of 0.5% in the value-added tax (VAT), taking it to 15.5% in a bid to raise R15bn to finance the extension of social welfare, as personal income tax is stretched to the limit.

But some analysts do not expect a VAT increase, because it is an election year, which would leave the income side of the Budget quite static.

Personal income tax has been resilient, but corporate income tax revenue has decreased by 14.2% year-on-year, primarily due to reduced mineral sales in the mining sector, influenced by weak global demand, low commodity prices, and challenges in port and rail infrastruc­ture affecting mineral exports.

FNB senior economist Siphamandl­a Mkhwanazi on Friday reiterated that the fiscal deficit was expected to remain wide at around 5% of gross domestic product (GDP) as a result of expenditur­e pressures stemming from public sector wages and debt servicing costs.

Additional­ly, Mkhwanazi said significan­t debt redemption­s and ongoing Eskom debt relief efforts will contribute to a high borrowing requiremen­t, posing risks to debt stabilisat­ion. “Against the backdrop of weak fiscal climate and subdued

growth prospects, there's a heightened possibilit­y that the government may tap into the accumulate­d funds, approximat­ely R500 billion, in the South African Reserve Bank's Gold and Foreign Exchange Contingenc­y Reserve Account (GFECRA),” Mkhwanazi said.

“The critical question remains the extent to which these funds will be utilised and for what purposes.” With revenue likely to be less than estimated in November and spending more, economists said the picture should be worse than the debt peaking at 77.7% of GDP in 2025/26 and then very slowly taper off.

Economists at the Bureau for Economic Research (BER) on Friday also said they suspected that there could be an announceme­nt on using the GFECRA to offset tax hikes to raise the additional R15bn.

“Without going into all the technical details, a prudent approach to using some of the funding – for example paying off some foreign debt – coupled with clear guidelines on how the funds could be used going forward might actually be welcomed by the markets,” BER said.

“While you could ‘get there' by lifting the VAT rate or pushing up corporate or personal tax rates, we think this is unlikely to happen this year for a variety of reasons. It will likely be achieved by bracket creep and the hope of increased efficiency in tax collection.”

It is estimated that bracket creep could increase tax take by between R15bn to R20bn, which will cover a few holes.

However, dipping into the GFECRA does not come at no cost to the country's fiscal metrics though it could help to either reduce the government's budget deficit or alleviate the debt burden.

 ?? ?? FINANCE Minister Enoch Godongwana. | TIMOTHY BERNARD Independen­t Newspapers
FINANCE Minister Enoch Godongwana. | TIMOTHY BERNARD Independen­t Newspapers

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