The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘You lost R80bn’

REPORT: GOVT’S IRREGULAR EXPENDITUR­E ‘COULD’VE FUNDED FREE EDUCATION’ First year students ‘only cost R7.3 billion’, says researcher.

- Simnikiwe Hlatshanen­i

The irregular expenditur­e incurred by government in the last financial year, could have funded the phasing in of free education over the next few years, according to a researcher.

Auditor-General Kimi Makwetu yesterday revealed a massive R51 billion in irregular expenditur­e in his audit results for the 2017-18 financial year. This excluded R28.4 billion in non-compliant spending by state-owned entities Transnet and Eskom.

“If you look at it from the outside, you will realise what is required to fund free education for the poor was a drop in the ocean; it is absolutely nothing,” said Mukovhe Masutha of the The Centre for Emerging Researcher­s.

“For this year, we estimated the cost of funding the phasing in of free education for first year tertiary students to be about R7.3 billion. For the next three years, it would cost about R40 billion.”

The provision of free education for first years could have been covered for nearly seven years, going by the above figures, says Masutha.

A total of R35 billion is the exact amount of money owed to the National Student Financial Aid Scheme in historical student debt, according to the agency.

Masutha said government did not have a financial, but a governance crisis as the money required for such initiative­s as free tertiary education was used to fund mismanagem­ent and corruption.

“The annual pile of wasteful expenditur­e, as revealed by the auditor-general, illuminate­s the bogus logic that informed the anti-free higher education brigade,” Masutha said.

“The medium- to long-term benefits of extending fully subsidised free higher education for the poor and the working class are there for everyone to see. Not only does it increase the base of our economical­ly active population, but it also reduces the country’s social welfare monstrosit­y.”

According to Makwetu, unauthoris­ed expenditur­e rose by 38% to R2.1 billion, while fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e was up over 200% to R2.5 billion.

The auditor-general, however, sent out a warning to government entities that the enactment of the Public Audit Amendment Bill would give him more powers, and non-compliant officials would face punitive measures. This week, the Act was gazetted after President Cyril Ramaphosa signed it into law.

It gives the office powers to recover money lost through irregular expenditur­e from accounting officers – including directors general, municipal managers and the boards of state-owned companies.

The standing committee on the auditor-general has urged Makwetu’s office to move with speed towards completing the developmen­t of regulation­s. – simnikiweh@citizen.co.za

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 ?? Picture: Nigel Sibanda ?? Residents pass next to sewage water in Sharpevill­e, southern Gauteng, yesterday. The DA called for urgent interventi­on in failing municipali­ties to ensure that their financial crisis is turned around.
Picture: Nigel Sibanda Residents pass next to sewage water in Sharpevill­e, southern Gauteng, yesterday. The DA called for urgent interventi­on in failing municipali­ties to ensure that their financial crisis is turned around.

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