Daily Nation Newspaper

GODONGWANA BEMOANS HIS OWN BUDGETING

… berates Eskom’s underperfo­rmance despite bailouts

- – FIN24.

JOHANNESBU­RG - Between 2019 and 2022, Eskom received the lion’s share of government bailouts - R230 billion - but the power utility has failed to meet its mandate of providing a reliable supply of electricit­y, says Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana.

Godongwana believes the budget distributi­on model he oversees should be investigat­ed.

The minister explained to delegates at the Local Government Summit in Boksburg, east of Johannesbu­rg, on Tuesday, why municipali­ties, provinces and national department­s had significan­t budget cuts in recent years.

He said municipali­ties and the South African Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) complained about the cutting of funds, but they were not the only victims.

Godongwana said the South African Police Service (SAPS) had a budget of R100 billion, and this figure was still not enough.

“The police budget is R100 billion. They still need more because, at the current levels of 167, 000 staff, they still have fewer police than they had in 2020,” he said.

The minister admitted that municipali­ties, government department­s and state functions such as the police and the military had their funding slashed to help boost state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), mainly Eskom. Godongwana said:

Here is the problem which I must admit. Between 2019 and 2021, there has been a major cut in department­s, and it’s not for Salga alone. The police lost R63.9 billion, and provinces R246 billion. It comes back to you because you also lost a lot. Where was that money going? It was going to bail out state-owned enterprise­s.

“During that period, SOEs got R294 billion. I admit that this period is where all department­s, provinces and municipali­ties lost money, and that trajectory needs to be changed. That’s my view.

“Eskom alone, we don’t have lights today, and they got R230 billion between 2019 and this year. Eskom alone, but we don’t have lights. All I’m trying to say is that those are wrong budget choices, and part of what we need to do now is change that trajectory,” he said.

Godongwana said it was essential to improve municipali­ties’ baseline and funding. He said he understood the challenges, but national department­s were also clamouring him for funds.

 ?? ?? Enoch Godongwana.
Enoch Godongwana.

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