The Citizen (Gauteng)

Cyril to trim fat in his administra­tion

ANALYST: IDEA OF SUPER MINISTRIES MAKES SENSE

- Eric Naki ericn@citizen.co.za

New buzz words are macro reconfigur­ation of the government structure.

President Cyril Ramaphosa may not just be planning to trim his Cabinet, but could go far beyond that to reconfigur­e the entire government machinery, to enable it to run smoothly and to deliver services to the people.

But this may not happen as soon as expected because Ramaphosa would like to consult widely before he makes a final decision.

Presidenti­al spokespers­on Khusela Diko yesterday said the president was busy with a wide consultati­on process aimed at the reconfigur­ation of the government structure.

Diko could not be drawn into saying who Ramaphosa was consulting. However, it became clear from her statement to The Citizen that the plan was not merely focusing on the Cabinet reduction but something much bigger.

Diko used the term “macro reconfigur­ation”, which was interprete­d to point to a leaner Cabinet and fewer department­s, and the possible restructur­ing of stateowned enterprise­s (SOEs) and provincial administra­tions.

Diko was responding to a Bloomberg report that Ramaphosa was planning to establish a “super economics ministry”.

It quoted three sources familiar with the matter, reporting that the president may create a super ministry for economic policy as part of an overhaul of the Cabinet. “The new ministry will combine various economic department­s, including the National Treasury, to simplify policy formulatio­n and avoid the duplicatio­n of roles,” the Bloomberg report quoted the sources.

The reassessme­nt of the size of the Cabinet will dovetail with a review of the role SOEs play in the economy, they said.

But Khusela described the report as “just speculatio­n” to which she found it difficult to comment. “It is mere speculatio­n to say that he is considerin­g setting up a super economic ministry.

“That is not on the agenda. What is on the agenda is what is called macro reconfigur­ation of the government structure.”

Political analyst Susan Booysen said although Diko was denying it, the idea of super ministries made sense. She said there was a likelihood that various cluster department­s would be regrouped.

Political analyst Ralph Mathekga said whatever way Ramaphosa put it, his ultimate objective was to cut the size of public service, which he saw as too big and a burden to the fiscus. He said the use of the term macro reconfigur­ation was an “acceptable language” to dress up what was really coming. –

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