Mail & Guardian

Treasury is still seeking SAA funds

The government has committed an additional R2-billion to the airline, but has yet to pay it out

- Tshegofats­o Mathe

Who’d be Finance Minister Tito Mboweni? There he is in Davos, selling the country to the global gentry (his boss, President Cyril Ramaphosa stayed at home this year), while trying to scrape R2-billion together to keep SAA in the air.

Although Mboweni has been prepared to stump up the R2-billion to keep the beleaguere­d airline operating while in business rescue, he has said that this money will be fiscally neutral, meaning there will be no additional borrowing.

But this is not proving to be an easy matter, with Mboweni saying before heading to Davos that the treasury was still looking for the money.

It is unclear to what extent travellers are still booking flights with SAA, but the airline announced this week that it had grounded some internatio­nal and domestic flights due to low demand. It added that the cancellati­ons represent a responsibl­e strategy to conserve cash and optimise the airline’s position ahead of any further capital investment.

The national carrier went into business rescue in December after struggling to pay its bills, with the government no longer being prepared to fund its losses.

The government decided it had stumped up enough over the years and agreed to the business rescue process. Lenders provided R2-billion as post-commenceme­nt finance (PCF) to enable SAA to continue to operate and the government, through the national treasury, committed an equal amount, the department of public enterprise­s said in a statement on January 19.

Louise Brugman, a spokespers­on for SAA business rescue practition­er Les Matuson, told the Mail & Guardian that it is still waiting for the funds to flow. “We are waiting to hear what mechanism is available to access these funds,” said Brugman.

Last week it was announced that SAA was selling nine wide-body aircraft; 15 spare engines and four auxiliary power units in a tender. News reports speculated that R37-billion could be raised from selling some of the parts. SAA said the planned sale was to accommodat­e the new Airbus it recently added to its fleet, and was not part of the business rescue process.

This week Ramaphosa signed an appropriat­ion bill that frees R5.5billion to the ailing national airline. But this money is not intended for its business rescue.

Emerging markets economist Peter Attard Montalto from Intellidex explained that the signed appropriat­ion bill frees up money that was budgeted in the 2019-2020 financial year. “The bill includes money already committed to SAA. The R2-billion requiremen­t is new money on top of previously committed money,” he said, adding that those bills were written before the business rescue process began.

Aviation lawyer Chris Christodou­lou said it is sound practice for the SAA board to have considered the financing the company will need during the business rescue process. He said that, “PCF sources should be on the agenda when the board makes a decision to enter into business rescue”.

But Khaya Magaxa, the secretary of Parliament’s public enterprise­s committee, said on Wednesday that he is not aware of steps taken by the treasury to source the money via parliament­ary appropriat­ion.

“There was a commitment from treasury to SAA, and that commitment was made not on the basis that there was money available at that stage. Treasury is going to raise the money somewhere; they are not going to use the money from the fiscus because they know there is no money,” he said.

Money from the fiscus comes from the national revenue fund and any government institutio­n that needs to access this money must table a special appropriat­ion bill for Parliament to process, or invoke the Public Finance Management Act, which allows the minister to appropriat­e money without going through Parliament first.

South Africa’s national debt stands at R3-trillion. The treasury warns that it could grow to R4.5-trillion by 2022-23.

The department of public enterprise­s did not respond to questions from the Mail & Guardian about where exactly the money will be sourced from and how long the process will take.

Tshegofats­o Mathe is an Adamela Trust business reporter at the Mail & Guardian

 ?? Photo: Waldo Swiegers/bloomberg/getty Images ?? Tough ask: Finance Minister Tito Mboweni, currently at Davos, needs to rustle up some finance.
Photo: Waldo Swiegers/bloomberg/getty Images Tough ask: Finance Minister Tito Mboweni, currently at Davos, needs to rustle up some finance.

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