Sunday World (South Africa)

Treasury rallies behind Mboweni

Minister’s supplement­ary budget has come under fire

- By Kabelo Khumalo

The National Treasury on Friday launched a spirited defence of the supplement­ary budget tabled by Finance Minister Tito Mboweni last month – in the face of severe criticism that the budget was not adequate to boost economic growth and save jobs.

Dondo Mogajane, director-general of National Treasury, took aim at proponents of greater government spending, warning the standing and select finances committees that at the current rate, the country’s debt to gross domestic product ratio would reach the 100% mark by 2023/24.

Mogajane said: “South Africa cannot use the pandemic as an excuse not to address weak public finances and achieve higher growth rates in the future. Higher government spending has not translated into higher growth in the past decade. The austerity vs stimulus debate is a false choice, and the National Treasury does not make policy according to this paradigm.”

Sanisha Packirisam­y, economist at Momentum Investment­s, said the allocation to debt-servicing costs is now simthere ilar in size to what government spends on health and is double the share being spent on capital assets.

“What is of particular concern is the fact that there does not seem to be a concrete plan of action on proposed structural reforms to get us out of this quagmire,” Packirisam­y said.

Numerous organisati­ons, including Cosatu, Budget Justice Coalition, Childrens’ Institute and Institute for Economic Justice made submission­s to parliament.

Some of the proposals put forward by the organisati­ons are that the planned fiscal consolidat­ion will harm the economy and there were also calls for wealth and solidarity taxes to boost public finances.

The harshest criticism came from a group of more than 100 economists and eminent people who have called on MPS to reject the budget. This grouping, which includes former statistici­an-general Pali Lehohla and economist Lumkile Mondi, said the budget should be guided by the need to support the public health response and keep businesses afloat, workers employed and incomes in the pockets of the poorest. “The potentiall­y catastroph­ic economic crisis that would result from failing to achieve these objectives would see the economy shrink, tax revenue plummet and public debt soar,” the group said.

 ??  ?? Sanisha Packirisam­y
Sanisha Packirisam­y
 ??  ?? Dondo Mogajane
Dondo Mogajane

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa