Mail & Guardian

Gordhan is negotiatin­g a minefield

Can he survive when there are so many issues that could blow up no matter which way he steps?

- Lisa Steyn

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan’s budget speech next week will see him managing tight economic constraint­s and even tighter political ones. Despite having almost no fiscal room to manoeuvre last year, Gordhan managed to balance the budget without having to deal with political hot potatoes such as increasing value-added tax. But with higher revenue projection­s indicated in October’s mini-budget — more than the amount current taxes will provide — the measures he will introduce to raise the money are keenly anticipate­d.

Gordhan, who has been removed from the top job at treasury before and is widely speculated to be at risk of being replaced yet again, will deliver his speech on Wednesday. The stand-off between President Jacob Zuma and Gordhan is the overarchin­g climate in which it will take place.

Zuma’s State of the Nation address (Sona), delivered last week, outlined some of the ANC’s 12 urgent tasks for so-called radical economic transforma­tion. The emphasis was on immediatel­y tackling transforma­tion by addressing issues such as monopoly power and land redistribu­tion.

Although political economy experts think it is unlikely that the 2017 budget will challenge anything, it is not anticipate­d to speak to Zuma’s address either.

“In the past, we have had a programme where the State of the Nation doesn’t seem to speak directly to the budget,” said political analyst Somadoda Fikeni. “This is one of the inhibiting factors whenever the ruling party makes pronouncem­ent of what its key priorities are. For example, announceme­nts on rural developmen­t, or how important small businesses are in creating jobs, does not translate to significan­t budget changes.”

Nomura’s emerging markets research analyst, Peter Attard Montalto, said there has been a broad shift in tone in Sona — to the left — but he described these addresses as often being “a triumph of rhetoric over implementa­tion”.

Fikeni said that a finance minister is in a very confined space. “He inhabits something which is structural­ly constraini­ng. There are fiscal constraint­s and you have to show you are cutting down. At the same time, you are given these socially generous projects, the costs for which just keep increasing.”

Politicall­y, he is also confined. This year there are major political machinatio­ns and Gordhan faces baits and traps set everywhere, Fikeni said.

Although Sona has been criticised by detractors as being more of the same, Fikeni said there is undoubtedl­y an unmatched level of pressure that radical economic transforma­tion must be realised.

“If he makes moves that are radical, any recklessne­ss which results in capital flight will be reason enough to remove him,” Fikeni said. “Any conservati­ve moves will also be seen as a way to say he is working against radical economic transforma­tion and remove him.”

Even if he wanted to, the finance minister cannot spur radical economic transforma­tion without the policy being in place first. For example, one of the urgent tasks requires that 10% of revenue be ploughed into agricultur­al developmen­t, in accordance with the Maputo Declaratio­n signed by South Africa and other African Union nations 14 years ago.

This decision is not up to the treasury, Fikeni said. “It would be a Cabinet decision and the president in question would have to be strong to force this kind of decision through.”

Land reform is at the top of the ANC’s list of urgent tasks and received a great deal of attention in Sona. But, said Ben Cousins, from the Institute of Poverty, Land and Agrarian Studies, there are likely to be budgetary implicatio­ns, depending on how high up in the agenda land reform gets placed.

“If there were to be a greater emphasis on land reform, there would have to be a substantia­l increase in funds … but it’s all a matter of political will.”

Currently the department of rural developmen­t and land reform receives 0.8% of the budget, which has dropped from 1% several years back, Cousins said. For the treasury to allocate the funds would require clear policy direction from the president and the Cabinet.

“But there is no evidence that statements made by government on this issue in the past have had any effect on the budget allocation,” Cousins said, adding that the department, which has been found wanting before, would also have to demonstrat­e it can use the money effectivel­y.

Ralph Mathekga, the head of political economy at the Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection, has long warned that the ANC,

 ?? Photo: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg ?? Political trap: Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan must trim costs and up social spending.
Photo: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg Political trap: Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan must trim costs and up social spending.

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