Business Day

Don’t dictate how savings are used — investment body

- Roxanne Henderson

SA’s R2.4-trillion savings industry has a request for the ANC: stop with threats of dictating where funds must invest and get going on projects that pensions can help finance.

“You can prescribe, but nothing will happen unless you have proper projects,” Leon Campher, the CEO of the Associatio­n for Savings & Investment SA (Asisa), an industry body of fund managers and insurers, said in an interview in Johannesbu­rg.

“The savings industry would gladly invest in infrastruc­ture or developmen­tal projects provided they are properly done.”

President Cyril Ramaphosa in August echoed the election manifesto of the ANC, saying a discussion was required to investigat­e the use of prescribed assets as a tool for fostering economic growth.

A lack of detail on how retirement funds could be forced into investing in state-owned companies or government projects has stoked concerns that it could leave pensioners poorer if these don’t make inflationb­eating returns.

There has been very little visible progress since Ramaphosa in 2018 announced that the government would create a multibilli­on-rand infrastruc­ture fund.

Banks and even Ramaphosa’s envoys appointed to lure investment into the country have complained over a dearth of projects, which has led to the near demise of SA’s constructi­on industry.

“If it’s funding for developmen­tal projects SA is after, government would be better off ensuring that the infrastruc­ture initiative proposed by the president in his fiscal stimulus plan a year ago gets going,” Campher said.

The associatio­n and the banking industry were working with the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA) to flesh out details of an infrastruc­ture initiative, Campher said, adding that DBSA had indicated it could be up and running by the end of this year. The lender did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

“The concept is that you have the government pot, the DBSA pot and you have got the savings pot so you can create what is called a blended-finance model.”

If prescripti­on is introduced, there is a good chance that R2.5trillion in foreign capital invested in SA equities could flow out of the country, he said.

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