The Citizen (Gauteng)

Gigaba drops nuke of his own

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It hasn’t taken new Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba long to stuff an elegantly shod foot in his mouth – and he did so in a spectacula­r way. Addressing the vexing issue of the controvers­ial nuclear build programme – Gigaba maintained it is still firmly on track – the minister admitted that the question of affordabil­ity had yet to be determined.

It doesn’t need nuclear physics to understand that in our economy’s present straitened circumstan­ces, the simple answer is we cannot possibly embark on a programme that requires guarantees of R350 billion. So the affordabil­ity issue should never have been raised at this juncture as central to the debate.

That figure equates to a staggering 7% of the country’s estimated gross domestic product for 2017. Recent history also tells us it will undoubtedl­y balloon as hold ups, mismanagem­ent and corruption arrive to claim their respective shares of the action, turning any predictive spreadshee­ts into so much shredded waste paper.

Standard & Poor’s decision to downgrade the South African economy to “junk” status – not, we would add, anything to do with Gigaba, other than he agreed to fill the Cabinet seat so hastily pulled out from under Pravin Gordhan – has placed the viability of stateowned enterprise­s as one of the major concerns in deliberati­ons.

“We estimate Eskom will have used up to R300 billion of this framework by 2020,” was the S&P estimate.

Add to this a warning from outgoing Treasury director-general Lungisa Fuzile that even though Eskom is the procurer of the nuclear build programme, if the power utility defaults on its debt, it will still be the responsibi­lity of the public to foot the bill.

The way Gigaba should have approached the nuclear conundrum is to have raised the unaffordab­ility of the exercise. But then he admits he just follows orders.

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