Daily News

Unspent funding slammed

It is a crime, says Radebe

- MAYIBONGWE MAQHINA

UNDERSPEND­ING of public funds meant for developmen­t was tantamount to economic sabotage, and ought to be treated as a crime, Minister in the Presidency, Jeff Radebe, said yesterday.

Addressing a conference of the Master Builders South Africa in Durban, Radebe said a failure to spend money earmarked for infrastruc­ture was proving to be a double whammy for the country.

He explained to the delegates that apart from the missed benefits of the investment­s, the government was still having to repay loans meant to finance them.

“It means you suffer twice,” Radebe said.

He made the comments in response to South African Forum of Civil Engineers Contractor­s chief executive, Webster Mfebe, who raised concerns about the failure to act against those responsibl­e for spending on public infrastruc­ture.

“There has got to be consequenc­es when the budget is underspent. It should be a crime if you don’t spend as intended. We’ve got to look at that,” Mfebe said.

KwaZulu-Natal government department­s failed to spend R605 million as at the end of the 2015-16 financial year.

Leading the pack among department­s with huge unspent funds was the Education Department, with R274m, followed by Social Developmen­t with R98.9m, Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t with R93m, and Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs with R63m.

Radebe agreed with Mfebe, saying: “That is tantamount to economic sabotage.”

He said public infrastruc­ture was meant to help communitie­s and provide services. And failure to roll out infrastruc­ture or to spend public funds sometimes led to the service delivery protests, Radebe said.

“The buck stops with the executive authority. They have to hold accounting authoritie­s accountabl­e,” Radebe said.

He said the national government had in the past acted against provinces that failed to spend public funds on infrastruc­ture – with Limpopo being one example – by taking over their powers.

He said that laws governing public funds made it an offence not to spend public funds.

“That is a crime under the Public Finance Management Act,” Radebe said.

Also speaking at the panel discussion, Master Builders South Africa deputy president, Bonke Simelane, said corruption, fraud and maladminis­tration should be looked into as well.

“Every effort must be made to root it out. We condemn such behaviour,” Simelane said.

Municipal Infrastruc­ture Grant chief executive, Themba Dladla, said more interactio­n was needed between business and municipali­ties on issues of infrastruc­ture.

“The role of business is critical to support municipali­ties to improve in those areas,” Dladla said, referring to better planning, skills transfer and contractin­g services.

He said there was a greater need to improve planning amid the shift from building infrastruc­ture to also funding maintenanc­e.

“There is a need for joint funding of strategic infrastruc­ture,” he said.

In his earlier address to the conference, Radebe said the government had continued to see the building and developmen­t of infrastruc­ture as an important lever to accelerate economic growth.

“We will not walk away from this as under-girding strategy for economic growth.

“Government is on record as noting that the country’s public sector capacity to implement major projects is presently inadequate, and that steps must be taken to strengthen planning and implementa­tion capacity at all levels,” he said.

 ??  ?? JEFF RADEBE
JEFF RADEBE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa