Sowetan

Asinamali

Reorganisa­tion officer to police battling entities

- By Andisiwe Makinana

Government has resolved to tighten rules around the granting of loan guarantees to financiall­y struggling stateowned enterprise­s (SOEs).

It also intends to effectivel­y put them under administra­tion each time they request a loan guarantee from the National Treasury. Tabling his budget speech in parliament‚ finance minister Tito Mboweni announced that a chief reorganisa­tion officer (CRO) would be appointed to a parastatal whenever it received a loan guarantee. Mboweni said the government was reviewing its framework for SOE support and has revised the contingenc­y reserve upwards of R13bn to respond to possible requests for financial support from cashstrapp­ed entities such as SA Airways and the SABC. “We must tighten the guarantee rules. If a state-owned enterprise applies for a government guarantee for operationa­l purposes‚ it will be required to appoint a CRO with national treasury and its bondholder­s. The chief reorganisa­tion officer will undertake a full operationa­l and financial review.

“When banks need state support‚ we appoint a curator. When provincial and municipal finances are in disarray‚ government can take over the running of the administra­tion. These rules should also apply to all SOEs‚” said Mboweni. At a press briefing prior to presenting the budget to MPs‚ Mboweni relayed how when he served on the board of cement maker PPC‚ when it experience­d financial difficulti­es‚ the banks “literally took away the keys from us” and imposed a chief restructur­ing officer.

“So that’s what we are going to do. We will now be installing a chief restructur­ing officer that in the speech we call a chief reorganisa­tion officer to be our ears and eyes inside every state-owned enterprise that we are going to provide cash for.

“We can’t just be providing cash to SOEs and stay back and hope things are going to work. Basically we are going to put them under curatorshi­p‚ that’s how you do things. “You show your determinat­ion to resolve problems … that you are not just a bank but you want to look after every rand and cent that you provide.” Mboweni said cabinet was considerin­g a proposal to end the issuing of guarantees for operationa­l purposes.

He said that the expiry dates on guaran tees would also be strictly enforced. “As the president announced‚ strategic equity partners will be found where possible‚” said Mboweni.

Last week‚ public enterprise­s minister Pravin Gordhan told his oversight committee that logistics utility Transnet was the only state-owned company that was reasonably selfsuffic­ient and doing a good job of reorientin­g its business. In his speech‚ Mboweni said the SOEs posed serious risks to the country’s finances. He reported to parliament that funding requests from SAA‚ the SABC‚ Denel‚ Eskom and other financiall­y challenged SOEs had increased‚ with several requesting state support just to continue operating.

During the past financial year‚ the minister revealed that Eskom used an additional R50bn of its R350bn guarantee in 2018/19. State arms manufactur­er Denel was granted a further R1bn guarantee‚ while SAA’s guaranteed debt increased by R6.2bn. “Isn’t it about time the country asks the question: do we still need these enterprise­s? If we do‚ can we manage them better? If we don’t need them‚ what should we do?” Mboweni congratula­ted the Land Bank‚ which repaid debt‚ reducing government’s guarantee exposure.

‘ ‘ We can’t just be providing cash to SOEs and stay back

 ?? /Gallo Images ?? Finance minister Tito Mboweni walking to the National Assembly where he delivered the Budget yesterday.
/Gallo Images Finance minister Tito Mboweni walking to the National Assembly where he delivered the Budget yesterday.
 ?? /ELMOND JIYANE/ GCIS ?? Finance minister Tito Mboweni, who was presenting his 2019 budget speech, shares a light moment with President Cyril Ramaphosa during the plenary of the National Assembly in Cape Town yesterday.
/ELMOND JIYANE/ GCIS Finance minister Tito Mboweni, who was presenting his 2019 budget speech, shares a light moment with President Cyril Ramaphosa during the plenary of the National Assembly in Cape Town yesterday.

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