The Citizen (Gauteng)

If Treasury goes, dictatorsh­ip looms

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After all the speculatio­n about President Jacob Zuma’s free tertiary education plan, the release yesterday of the Heher Commission probe into post-school education funding came as an anti-climax. Not only was there no sign of free university education, but there was a proposal for a “cost sharing” finance system which would effectivel­y burden students with heavy debt after they graduate.

The most significan­t recommenda­tion in the report was a proposal to invest R50 billion in institutio­ns for technical and vocational training and make them free for students.

The release of the report followed suggestion­s that Zuma had been concocting a radical plan for free tertiary education and that he had instructed the Treasury to “rob Peter to pay Paul” by moving funds from other programmes. After all that fuss, Zuma said he would release the report ahead of schedule,

Are we too cynical to ask of this master strategist and cunning manipulato­r whether this was not done deliberate­ly to divert attention from more seriously damaging developmen­ts with his administra­tion?

It has now emerged that the capable and experience­d deputy director-general of finance, Michael Sachs, has quit his job. Reports suggest it is because he has become increasing­ly concerned that Zuma and the office of the presidency are playing a more and more central role in the government budgeting process.

That has ominous implicatio­ns indeed. Given that the president is wholly unperturbe­d about the mountain of allegation­s of corruption and state capture looming over him; and that he has pronounced himself in favour of the ruinously expensive R1 trillion nuclear build programme, it appears as though Zuma is grabbing those reins of power not already in his hands.

The Treasury has been the last bulwark against the reckless spending of the Zuma regime.

If that goes, what we have left is, simply, a dictatorsh­ip.

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