The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Covid-19 batters SA debt targets

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SOUTH Africa won’t be able to meet its finance ministry’s debt targets and it may be undesirabl­e for it to attempt to do so at a time when the economy is being battered by the fallout from the coronaviru­s, according to an advisory panel appointed by President Cyril Ramaphosa.

In a more than 100-page document advising the government on an economic recovery programme that President Ramaphosa is due to unveil tomorrow, the Presidenti­al Economic Advisory Council said spending cuts could hold back growth and have other adverse consequenc­es.

“We risk having nurses and doctors being unable to provide health services because of medicine stock-outs, teachers paid but with no learning materials or classrooms, police officials grounded in stations because there is not enough petrol to go out on patrol,” the panel said.

“This undermines the progressiv­e realisatio­n of socio-economic rights to health, education and basic services, and will reduce the efficiency of social spending, which is currently very poor, still further.”

The plan, which was submitted to the president and seen by Bloomberg, is an attempt to counter the effect of a pandemic that is expected to result in South Africa’s biggest economic contractio­n in almost nine decades. Finance Minister Tito Mboweni has said he plans to arrest the increase in debt levels at 87 percent of gross domestic product in the 2023-24 financial year, falling to 74 percent in 2028-29. Without an interventi­on, the ratio could climb to 141 percent over the next decade, he said.

The advisory panel’s proposals build on a plan submitted by a group of labour, business and government leaders and another by the ruling African National Congress, which were considered by cabinet. Tyrone Seale, Ramaphosa’s spokesman, didn’t answer calls to his cellphone.

The government should also boost an economic stimulus package to 15 percent of GDP, from 11 percent, and set up a rescue fund for businesses that were healthy before a lockdown was imposed in late March to curb the virus’s spread, said the panel, which has about 20 members ranging from academics to a former Tanzanian central bank governor.

President Ramaphosa.

It also called on the South African Reserve Bank to use the targeted long-term refinancin­g operations model piloted by the European Central Bank – a measure that offers banks long-term funding on attractive terms to stimulate lending.

Increases to the fuel levy and estate taxes should also be considered, as should a threeyear “solidarity tax” that would boost income tax for higher earners, the panel said. It recommende­d that the state’s wage bill be curbed and increases to welfare payments be limited.

The panel criticised the government’s foot- dragging on encouragin­g the expansion of renewable energy output and delays in allowing private companies to generate more of its own electricit­y to end regular power cuts that have hindered economic growth.

“Those countries not adapting to a green transition will find themselves behind and excluded,” it said.

“The constraint­s to achieving this do not lie in our natural-resource endowments, the availabili­ty of appropriat­e technologi­es, or even access to the necessary finance – it lies in our heads and in our political economy.”

Eskom Holdings, the state-owned power monopoly, should be mandated to raise “large-scale concession­ary climate-finance from the internatio­nal community” in return for accelerati­ng the closure of its coal-fired plants,” it said.

The council also said:

◆ Pension funds and other private investors will back infrastruc­ture projects if there is a clear pipeline for the next 10 to 20 years. ◆ Allowing the constructi­on of 5 000 to 6 000 megawatts of electricit­y generating capacity a year could encourage R500 billion in investment and create 50 000 jobs. ◆ R100 billion will need to be spent on the

power grid by 2030.

◆ The introducti­on of a basic-income grant could cost R243 billion a year and would necessitat­e tax increases.

◆ To accelerate land reform, an agricultur­e developmen­t fund should be set up, funded by the private sector and donors. - news24.com

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