Business Day

Job creation:

- /Veli Nhlapo/Sowetan

Delivering his state of the province address Gauteng premier David Makhura said on Tuesday that billions of rand will be spent by his administra­tion to build infrastruc­ture and create more than 350,000 jobs in the next five years.

Gauteng premier David Makhura said on Tuesday that his administra­tion would spend billions of rand on building infrastruc­ture and creating more than 350,000 jobs in the next five years.

He said the R60bn they would spend on building and maintainin­g infrastruc­ture over the period would help facilitate the developmen­t of 50 black industrial­ists.

In delivering his state of the province address at the Sefako Makgatho Health Sciences University in Ga-Rankuwa, north of Pretoria, Makhura said his administra­tion is on track to create “sustainabl­e and decent jobs” for young people over the next five years.

This would help offset SA’s unemployme­nt rate, now at 29.1%, its highest since 2008.

Makhura’s spokespers­on, Thabo Masebe, told Business Day that Gauteng finance MEC Nomantu Nkomo-Ralehoko would provide details on the R60bn in her budget speech next week.

“The premier was mentioning the figures based on the plans he has seen from the provincial treasury. The MEC [Nkomo-Ralehoko] will say where the money will come from. But the R60bn that the premier spoke about will come from the budget,” he said.

In his address, Makhura said the government would use its financial muscle to help empower small businesses. Over the next five years, the provincial government would set up economic empowermen­t programmes by spending R4bn a year in buying goods and services from 2,000 township enterprise­s; supporting 50 emerging black farmers and 20 black agro-processors to help transform their enterprise­s into full-scale commercial entities; and supporting 500 co-operatives by buying uniforms and food packs for vulnerable households from them instead of establishe­d businesses.

The premier said he wants to increase Gauteng’s exports and trade in Africa, and the 10 highgrowth sectors identified would produce manufactur­ed goods and services “destined for the entire African Continenta­l Free Trade Area”.

The high-growth sectors include energy; transport and logistics; the digital economy; agribusine­ss; constructi­on and infrastruc­ture; automotive; financial services; the cultural and creative industry; and the industrial­isation of cannabis.

“In 2030, intra-Africa trade should contribute to the creation and maintenanc­e of 150,000 jobs, up from the current 50,000 jobs. We also want to increase exports to major regions of the world by 10% by 2025,” he said.

Makhura said that over the five years the Gauteng city region would attract 447 foreign direct investment projects worth R264bn, which would create more than 69,000 jobs.

Makhura said that the provincial government would this decade drive an “aggressive investment agenda” aimed at unlocking the province’s five developmen­t corridors.

In the northern corridor in Tshwane, housing the province’s car industry, investment projects by automotive manufactur­ers would bring “at least R50bn in investment” into the city’s economy, while investment projects in the eastern corridor of Ekurhuleni would bring in more than R200bn; the Vaal southern corridor R40bn; and the western corridor of the West Rand R60bn. The central corridor of Johannesbu­rg is expected to bring in R200bn.

The provincial government and municipali­ties will together invest R100bn in bulk infrastruc­ture in the five corridors.

“Taken together, the private sector, state-owned enterprise­s, provincial government and municipal infrastruc­ture projects will bring in at least R760bn into the Gauteng economy over the next five to 10 years,” he said.

On electricit­y, Makhura, who is also ANC Gauteng chair, said the province would request a ministeria­l determinat­ion from mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe “to enable us to unlock renewable energy projects” to power the provincial economy.

Gauteng is the industrial hub of the country, and uses most of the power generated in SA.

SOLAR ENERGY

“We will also take decisive steps to increase the availabili­ty and use of gas, fast-track our shovelread­y solar energy projects, recommissi­on mothballed power stations, and promote hydrogen fuel cell technology in new developmen­ts across the Gauteng city region.”

He said that Eskom’s loadsheddi­ng is “destroying the economy”.

On the controvers­ial e-tolls issue, the premier, who has used his previous state of the province addresses to lash out at the user-pays system, announced that Gauteng has made a “strong and persuasive case to national government on the e-tolls”.

“I have been assured by President Cyril Ramaphosa that a lasting solution has been found, and an announceme­nt by the president is imminent,” he said.

The SA National Roads Agency’s e-toll project, launched in 2013, is largely a failure due to low levels of compliance from Gauteng motorists.

The cash-strapped agency has had to shelve several projects due to a lack of funds.

MAKHURA SAID THE GOVERNMENT WOULD USE ITS FINANCIAL MUSCLE TO HELP EMPOWER SMALL BUSINESSES

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 ?? /Russell Roberts ?? Driven mad: A lasting solution to Gauteng’s contentiou­s e-tolls has been found, and an announceme­nt by the president is imminent, according to premier David Makhura.
/Russell Roberts Driven mad: A lasting solution to Gauteng’s contentiou­s e-tolls has been found, and an announceme­nt by the president is imminent, according to premier David Makhura.

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