The Citizen (KZN)

SA SOEs in dire straits

DECLINE: THOSE STILL DOING WELL

- Lunga Simelane lungas@citizen.co.za

Because govt did not act earlier, state-owned firms not viable anymore.

As foundering stateowned enterprise­s (SOEs) continue to impact on South Africa’s unstable economy, experts believe it may be too late to save them.

While the public enterprise­s portfolio committee welcomed a proposal to declare load shedding a state of disaster, MPs called underperfo­rming SOEs, such as Transnet and diamond company Alexkor, a disaster.

A briefing was held by the public enterprise­s department (DPE) on the progress made in addressing the auditor-general’s findings with respect to the department and its associated SOEs.

The committee was concerned about underperfo­rming SOEs and excessive amounts of fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e.

SOEs in the DPE portfolio include Transnet, SA Forestry Company Limited (Safcol), Alexkor, Eskom, Denel and SA Airways (SAA).

Chief economist at Efficient Group Dawie Roodt said it seemed parliament at long last understood the state of SOEs.

Because politician­s had not acted earlier, SOEs were, in many instances, not viable anymore.

“Unless you spend very big amounts of money on them, they will simply die,” he said.

Transnet received an unqualifie­d audit opinion in the 2021-22 financial year for the first time in five years, while Safcol received its third.

State diamond dealer Alexkor was likely to complete its audit later this financial year, when the outcome could be a qualified audit, and Denel had yet to commence a meeting with external auditors. SAA was expected to finalise its outstandin­g audits by 31 March.

“It is coming to an end,” Roodt said. “The tax base is not available any more to bail out these institutio­ns and it is just too late to save them.”

The DPE reported the adverse findings were due to financial challenges and poor internal controls.

DPE portfolio committee chair Khaya Magaxa said it was further alarmed because some SOEs, which had previously done well, were on the decline.

“Safcol, for example, reported irregular expenditur­e amounting to R800 million, despite previously painting a rosy picture when it appeared before the committee in parliament,” he said.

“Transnet recorded R1.1 billion in irregular expenditur­e and Alexkor is a disaster. Denel has not issued financial statements for two years and depends on government bailouts to continue operating.

“National Treasury cannot afford these bailouts,” he said. –

The tax base is not available anymore to bail out these SOEs

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