Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

HSRC boss backs special education tax

Wealthy must aid expansion plans

- CRAIG DODDS

THE GOVERNMENT should be more blunt about the country’s economic growth prospects to send the message that the state is in crisis, and that sacrifices will have to be made, academics from the Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) have said.

Coming out yesterday in support of a wealth tax to help fund the expansion of access to university education, HSRC chief executive officer Professor Crain Soudien said that while South Africa had achieved “extraordin­ary” growth of 500 000 in the number of graduates over the past five years, this needed to increase by the same number every year up to 2030 to meet the targets of the National Developmen­t Plan.

This explanatio­n, that the problem was far bigger than simply paying for those needy students not already receiving support, came as members of Parliament grappled with the question of how to raise funds to meet the demands of the #FeesMustFa­ll movement for free education.

Briefing Parliament’s standing committee on public accounts on the medium-term budget policy statement tabled by Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene last week, Soudien said the concern was from where the money would come.

Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande said earlier in the week that covering the full costs of all qualifying university students would require an estimated R37 billion (in 2011 prices) over the next three years.

Funding from the National Student Financial Aid Scheme covered 16 percent of university students, but it was estimated that 25.5 percent of stu- years than the poor.

His colleague, Dr Greg Houston, said the finance minister should make “realistic announceme­nts of growth figures so the message is sent out that the state is in crisis and it requires sacrifices from society as a whole, and dampens expectatio­ns that are unrealisti­c”.

Professor Sharlene Swartz said perception­s of high levels of corruption would make it hard to implement a wealth tax. “My own research recently has shown that as soon as you start speaking about a wealth tax or increasing taxation, people start saying if only government could eradicate the R35bn in corrupt spending.”

Even though this figure had never been substantia­ted and might well be lower, it left the government with a “huge perception problem that we need to fix before people are going to want to dig into their pockets”.

Responding to concerns raised by the HSRC about the performanc­e of the state, ANC MP Sheila Shope-Sithole said Parliament needed to shoulder much of the blame. “Because, for a very long time, I’ve listened to members of Parliament distancing themselves from the problem we have – blaming government, and this one and that one.”

The constituti­on gave Parliament the responsibi­lity for oversight.

‘I’ve listened

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