The Citizen (Gauteng)

Taxpayers saved by the polls

OPTIONS: GOVT COULD LOOK AT TRIMMING SALARY BILL

- Sipho Mabena – siphom@citizen.co.za

South Africans are likely to escape tax hikes in Wednesday’s budget, predict analysts.

‘Money the SOEs need is in pockets of looters and must be recovered.’

Saved by the polls, overtaxed South Africans are set to escape tax hikes in Wednesday’s budget speech but analysts believe the reprieve will be short-lived, with the sting of the fiscus deficit expected to come in the medium-term budget policy statement after the elections.

The presentati­on of the 2019 budget will certainly be a challengin­g maiden speech for Finance Minister Tito Mboweni, given the backdrop of heavily indebted state-owned enterprise­s (SOEs), a sluggish economy and high unemployme­nt.

Eskom alone needs R100 bil- lion and Mboweni is expected to outline how President Cyril Ramaphosa’s drastic measures to pull the power utility out of the doldrums will be bankrolled.

Economist Chris Hart believes it is unlikely Mboweni will increase taxes and levies because of the negative impact on the ANC government’s election campaign.

He said: “The tax base is exhausted and you do not increase taxes of the already overtaxed electorate in an election year...”

Hart said Mboweni was likely to announce increased taxes in the medium-term budget policy statement but that this will be done through levies and increased tolls.

Senior economist of Econometri­x Mike Schussler said government could borrow from the internatio­nal market or change the prescribed assets for pension funds – a back door.

“We are probably going to see the government encouragin­g changing rules and regulation­s of pension funds so they invest more of our savings into Eskom and government bonds,” he said. Schussler said government could look at trimming its salary bill but this may be problemati­c as civil servants expect a pay hike.

Professor Rasigan Maharaj, director of Tshwane University of Technology’s Institute for Economic Research, said SOEs had the money they needed, but it was in the pockets of looters and must be recovered.

“The failure of Eskom is because it is corporatis­ed, almost privatised. It is not because it is a state-owned enterprise working on the people of SA’s mandate.

“It is working in the interest of people that give it money and who steal the money from it,” he said.

Govt can borrow from internatio­nal market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa