The Citizen (Gauteng)

Tightening belts

SAVING: JOBS FROZEN, PRIVATISAT­ION CONSIDERED

- Natalie Greve news@citizen.co.za

Teachers, police, nurses, other critical posts excluded.

As part of a money-saving drive aimed at narrowing the country’s increasing budget deficit, National Treasury has announced a freeze on appointmen­ts to administra­tive and managerial positions in government from April.

“[New appointmen­ts] will be blocked on government’s payroll system starting in April. The National Treasury, working with provincial treasuries and the Department of Public Service and Administra­tion, will consider authorisin­g appointmen­ts only after department­s have submitted clear human resource plans aligned with reduced compensati­on budgets and greater efficiency,” read the 2016 national budget, released yesterday.

Teachers, nurses, doctors, police officers and other posts deemed critical would be excluded from the lock.

Treasury also announced yesterday that it was currently reviewing all contracts across government valued at over R10 million to ensure value for money, reduce wastage and identify irregular procuremen­t.

“The primary focus of this review is on all state-owned companies (SOCs) … such as Prasa, Eskom, Transnet, SABC and SAA,” it said in a statement.

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan pointed to the planned renegotiat­ion of government leasing contracts and the introducti­on of new centrally negotiated contract systems for banking services, informatio­n communicat­ion technology infrastruc­ture and services, health technology, school constructi­on and pupil support materials.

Government aimed to cap its overall expenditur­e ceiling to R1.4 trillion in 2016-17.

Noting challenges in the governance, mandates, financing and operations of SOCs, Gordhan has committed to ovehauling the structure of government entities that remain a drain on the fiscus, suggesting some state entities would fare better in private hands.

With an asset base of over R1 trillion – equivalent to about 27% of GDP – the minister noted that the mandate of some SOCs overlapped, while others operated in markets that required more competitiv­e transparen­cy.

Some were also “no longer relevant” to the country’s developmen­t agenda. He said entities that are no longer necessary, should be phased out. –

 ?? Picture: Neil McCartney ?? WINGS CLIPPED. Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said it was clear government did not need to invest in four airline businesses.
Picture: Neil McCartney WINGS CLIPPED. Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan said it was clear government did not need to invest in four airline businesses.
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