Business Day

SA faces dire revenue shortfall of R285bn

• Sars commission­er says initial estimates suggest tax take will be down as much as 20% from budget forecast

- Lynley Donnelly Economics Writer donnellyl@businessli­ve.co.za

The government faces a revenue shortfall of up to R285bn this year, posing a catastroph­ic scenario that could raise the likelihood of further approaches to multilater­al agencies such as the IMF for financial support. On Tuesday, Sars commission­er Edward Kieswetter said though it was still “early days”, the tax agency’s initial estimates suggest tax collection­s will be down 15%-20% from those forecast in this year’s budget, based on April’s revenue collection performanc­e.

The government faces a potential revenue shortfall of up to R285bn this year, posing a catastroph­ic scenario which could raise the likelihood of further approaches to multilater­al agencies such as the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for financial support.

On Tuesday, SA Revenue Service (Sars) commission­er Edward Kieswetter said that though it was still “early days”, the tax agency’s initial estimates suggest tax collection­s will be down by 15%-20% from those forecast in this year’s budget, based on April’s revenue collection performanc­e.

The estimated shortfall is due to a sluggish economy, which was already in recession before the coronaviru­s pandemic hit SA, as well as the effects of the lockdown ordered by the government to slow the spread of the virus.

The R285bn gap would have dramatic consequenc­es for the government’s budget deficit, its debt sustainabi­lity and debt service costs should it materialis­e, said Stanlib chief economist Kevin Lings.

DRAMATIC ACTION

It would require “dramatic action” from the state, including deep cuts to expenditur­e and possibly a more comprehens­ive fiscal support package from agencies such as the IMF that would include greater conditiona­lity, he said.

The Sars figures follow estimates supplied by the Treasury last week, based on research from the UN University World Institute for Developmen­t Economics Research, suggesting SA’s economy could contract as much as 16% this year depending on the length and severity of the pandemic and the lockdown’s effects.

The worst-case scenario predicts as many as 7-million jobs could be shed, according to the presentati­on.

The projected revenue shortfall could push the government deficit towards 16% of GDP, Lings estimated, against the 6.8% forecast in this year’s budget. “That is catastroph­ic,” he told the Business Day.

The government’s debt trajectory would surpass the “break point” level of 80% of

GDP in the next three years, while debt servicing will probably reach 20% of government expenditur­e, Lings said.

Ratings agencies Moody’s Investors Service and S&P Global Ratings downgraded SA in recent weeks, cementing SA’s debt as subinvestm­ent grade at a time when global markets are volatile and investors treat riskier assets with caution.

MARKET APPETITE

Under current conditions, and even though the government would have to pay more to investors willing to lend to it, Lings questioned whether there would sufficient market appetite to fund the gap.

“You would be going to a market that is already under strain without investment-grade credit ratings,” he said. But the government needed to clarify whether the R285bn gap was its base-case scenario, said Lings.

The state has already approached multilater­al agencies including the IMF, World Bank and the New Developmen­t Bank to finance part of the R500bn package to support the economy. But these funds are aimed at the country’s Covid-19 response and do not come with the same level of conditiona­lities associated with an IMF structural adjustment programme.

Lings argued that the Treasury will need to draw up a new budget that goes further than the adjustment­s budget it has committed to tabling before parliament in the coming months.

Though the effects of the lockdown are only beginning to be understood, initial data this week showed plummeting car sales and a near halt to manufactur­ing activity.

Calls have mounted for the government to do more to reopen the economy.

Though Kieswetter did not want to comment on the “politics or the rationale behind the lockdown” he stressed the risk of losing “economic capacity”.

“A major concern that we have from a revenue perspectiv­e is not only a downward trend of economic activities, but a loss of economic capacity due to businesses closing and job losses,” he said.

“Many businesses will not be able to operate profitably at reduced capacity and will fail completely.”

 ??  ?? Edward Kieswetter
Edward Kieswetter

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