Daily Dispatch

Tell the people how bad things really are

- Carol Paton Carol Paton is writer at large for Business Day

When will President Cyril Ramaphosa and Finance minister Nhlanhla Nene let the public in on the news of just how bad a state the country is in financiall­y?

The other day Ramaphosa said in a television interview: “This hardship will not last forever and growth is going to happen.

“It is around the corner and soon we’ll be able to alleviate the difficult burden that our people are bearing at the moment.”

Anybody with even a little understand­ing of South Africa’s economy and public finances knows this is nonsense.

Relief is not around the corner.

There is no guarantee that growth “will happen”.

The outlook is highly uncertain.

Most forecasts for 2018 and 2019 have GDP growth lower than population growth.

No progress has been made on making the structural reforms needed to attract investment.

In fact, the hardship Ramaphosa talks about is hardship that is still to come.

In October, the government will again be forced to cut budgets for housing, school building, roads and infrastruc­ture, and will be unable to find more money for healthcare and hospitals, which are in a state of collapse.

But the hardship message has not and will not go out.

Ramaphosa glosses over the looming problems, giving the nod to above-inflation increases in the public sector.

Nene, who equally should be telling the truth about where we stand, is silent.

When faced with an opportunit­y to speak to the news media – like he was at a special World Economic Forum meeting in Johannesbu­rg – he takes care not to say anything worth quoting.

Asked on that occasion whether he had concerns about Eskom, Nene said he had none. The government had appointed a new board and executive team, he said, repeating news now six months old. It was now looking into “stabilisin­g Eskom’s finances”, he said without any further explanatio­n, after which the business model would receive attention.

What he should have said is that Eskom poses a major risk to the national economy and public finances.

It is the number one problem on our agenda.

On Tuesday details of commercial loans granted to Eskom, and also Transnet, from Chinese state banks were announced with much fanfare at the start of the 10th Brics summit in Johannesbu­rg.

Eskom secured a $2.5bn (R33.2bn) loan from the China Developmen­t Bank, while the Industrial and Commercial Bank (ICB) granted R4bn to Transnet.

But details of these have been cloaked in secrecy.

The problem, says former Business Day and Financial Mail editor Peter Bruce, is that should the Chinese loans contain secret conditions, other lenders would be loath to become involved if, say, Eskom requires more financing, which it will.

Add to the Eskom burden the costs of the funding needs of other state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs).

Going by public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan’s SOS to banks in June when he asked for help funding SOEs, this could be in the region of R30bn. Gordhan and Nene asked banks and asset managers whether they could consider some sort of aggregated loan facility.

Pockets of debt are building throughout the state system.

Over the past year municipal debt to Eskom rose 44% to R13.6bn, according to the company’s results.

Municipal debt to the department of water and sanitation’s water trading entity rose sharply as local government­s failed to keep pace with payments to bulk water suppliers.

This in turn puts stress on formerly healthy SOEs such as the Trans Caledon Tunnel Authority.

There are other contingent liabilitie­s on the government’s balance sheet.

Legal claims against government department­s are estimated at R35bn.

Obligation­s of the Road Accident Fund are actuariall­y estimated to be R189.2bn.

Then there is the R30bn overshoot in the public sector wage settlement, which is going to mean trimming an equal amount off national and provincial budgets to accommodat­e this.

As well as uncertaint­y on the growth outlook, revenue collection is uncertain.

The year is proceeding apace as the SA Revenue Service continues without a permanent commission­er and with a depleted staff.

Nene’s spokesman, Jabulani Sikhakhane, says Nene will not speak to the news media about the funding needs of the SOEs.

He did, however, commit to speak to Business Day about SA’s broader fiscal challenges after this week’s Brics summit.

Ramaphosa, though, smiles and waves and talks about ANC unity and emulating the leadership of Nelson Mandela.

ANC provincial dynamics have kept him very busy of late.

Up next are the ANC list conference­s, which promise to be even more distractin­g and draining.

Then we will have an election, which will be no time for the truth to be told.

Instead, expect more lies and easy victories claimed.

Pockets of debt are building throughout the state system. Over the past year municipal debt to Eskom rose 44% to R13.6bn

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