Daily Dispatch

State scours its coffers in bid to rescue SAA

- LYNLEY DONNELLY

SA is scrambling to secure extra funding to rescue SAA (SAA), which last month entered a form of bankruptcy protection in a last-ditch bid to save the state-owned company and around 10,000 related jobs.

Tito Mboweni, the country’s finance minister, told business leaders in Johannesbu­rg ahead of the World Economic Forum annual meeting in Davos next week that the treasury had provided “financial support to the best of our abilities”.

“As of yesterday when I was speaking to the director-general of National Treasury we were still trying to find additional financing for SAA . ... Let’s keep our fingers crossed,” he said.

SAA was promised R2bn from the government and another R2bn from lenders. But while the lenders paid up, the treasury has yet to establish a mechanism for identifyin­g and dispersing its share.

The airline is one of several state entities, including state power company Eskom, struggling with debt after nearly a decade of mismanagem­ent.

Their woes are seen as the single greatest threat to Africa’s most industrial­ised economy and have been largely responsibl­e for bringing SA’s credit rating to the brink of junk.

Fearing another downgrade if it raises its deficit, SA’s finance ministry has sought to fund SAA in a “fiscally neutral” manner, by selling assets or cutting costs elsewhere. The airline has put up for sale nine of its Airbus aircraft, a tender document seeking proposals from interested buyers seen by Reuters on Thursday showed. The document said SAA is selling the Airbus A340-300s and A340600s as well as 15 spare engines. Handling these issues is seen as the biggest test of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s commitment to economic reforms.

“The pace of structural reforms is not the way we want it to be, so we need to speed it up to generate this impetus to economic growth,” Mboweni said.

But without cash, SAA could very quickly become insolvent.

On Wednesday, business rescue practition­ers Les Matuson and Siviwe Dongwana said they were “hopeful that a mechanism can be found to unlock the liquidity constraint­s.”

However, a trade union official warned that SAA could be forced to suspend about flights and delay salary payments if the government does not pay up very soon. The government’s treatment of SAA and whether it is willing to sacrifice jobs will send a signal ahead of a much bigger battle with unions over ailing state utility Eskom, which is struggling to keep the lights on. Eskom’s chairman resigned past week after power cuts even during the low-demand holiday season. The company is also fighting the regulator in court over energy tariffs. —

 ?? Picture: REUTERS/ SUMAYA HISHAM ?? RESCUE STRATEGY: Government is racing against time to secure funds to rescue A South African Airways (SAA). The SEO is selling nine of its Airbus aircraft.
Picture: REUTERS/ SUMAYA HISHAM RESCUE STRATEGY: Government is racing against time to secure funds to rescue A South African Airways (SAA). The SEO is selling nine of its Airbus aircraft.

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