In Session

Reducing SA’s Debt will unleash investment and growth, says Mboweni

“We have accumulate­d far too much debt. This downturn will add more. This year, out of every rand that we pay in tax, 21 cents goes to paying the interest on our past debts.” This indebtedne­ss condemns South Africa to ever higher interest rates.”

- Writes Mava Lukani.

When the Minister of Finance, Mr Tito Mboweni, delivered the supplement­ary budget before the hybrid sitting of the National Assembly (NA) recently, he said the Public Finance Management Act, together with the Money Bills Amendment Procedure and Related Matters Act, empowers him as the Minister of Finance, to table an adjustment budget when necessary,

“The historic nature of this pandemic and economic downturn has made it necessary to table such an adjustment. We will table a second adjustment budget in October together with the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement.”

The supplement­ary budget does two things. Firstly, it brings an Adjustment­s Appropriat­ion Bill and a Division of Revenue Amendment Bill to the House. Secondly, it formalises the two tax Bills to give effect to the government’s response. The Bills ask Parliament to approve the response package for Covid-19, not merely return the economy to where it was before the coronaviru­s, but to forge a new economy in a new global reality. “This supplement­ary budget sets out a roadmap to stabilise debt, by improving our spending patterns, and creating a foundation for economic revival,” Mr Mboweni told the House.

Most of the government’s energies and resources have been focused on the Covid - 19 pandemic. “We have quickly adopted temporary countercyc­lical fiscal and monetary policy measures.” However, after the storm of Covid-19, “we must work just as quickly to emerge with a sustainabl­e fiscus”.

South Africa has many strengths, including, Mr Mboweni pointed out, its young and ambitious people, strong institutio­ns, a robust and vibrant democracy, an independen­t judiciary and our commitment to social justice progress. Our economic strengths include a diverse industrial base, a flexible exchange rate, stable inflation, and deep domestic capital markets that allow us to borrow mainly in rands.

However, debt is our weakness. “We have accumulate­d far too much debt. This downturn will add more. This year, out of every rand that we pay in tax, 21 cents goes to paying the interest on our past debts.” This indebtedne­ss condemns South Africa to ever higher interest rates.

“If we reduce debt, we will reduce interest rates for everyone and we will unleash investment and growth.”

He told NA MPs that he tabled the supplement­ary budget with an eye on the future: “We set out a strategy to build a bridge to recovery.

Our herculean task is to close the mouth of the hippopotam­us. It is eating our children’s inheritanc­e. We need to stop it now. Our herculean task is to stabilise debt.”

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 ??  ?? Debt-service costs as a proportion of main budget revenue: Source - National Treasury.
Debt-service costs as a proportion of main budget revenue: Source - National Treasury.

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