The Citizen (KZN)

Lesufi banks on change

PROPOSAL: GAUTENG STATE BANK TO AID THOSE INELIGIBLE FOR FINANCING

- Lunga Mzangwe

To enable people to borrow and fund township businesses.

Gauteng premier Panyaza Lesufi has reiterated his intention to establish SA’s first provincial state bank despite criticism the existing institutio­ns have failed to achieve their mandate.

The bank would allow people to borrow money and fund township businesses, among other functions.

Lesufi said the process of establishi­ng a Gauteng state bank would be an important step by the provincial government to extend access to financial services to all residents of the province, specifical­ly those who remain largely excluded from financial services.

“The concept of a state bank is not new to South Africa. South Africa currently has several state banks, including the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa, the Land Bank and many other developmen­t finance institutio­ns. The idea of a state bank is predicated on the principle of the state intervenin­g in the economy,” said Lesufi.

Economics professor Bonke Dumisa said it would be a waste of time to start another state bank as there were already others that had failed to cater for the marginalis­ed in society.

“They are not achieving what people want them to achieve.

“People have been making a lot of noise about the state bank. At least they are moving away from that whole thing of saying the South African Reserve Bank must become the state bank,” said Dumisa.

Lesufi said Gauteng MEC for finance Jacob Mamabolo has been tasked with looking into the process that the provincial government needs to undertake to implement this resolution.

“MEC Mamabolo has appointed a legal firm that is taking care of the proposal on how the state bank will be funded, how it would run, how it would operate in our province,” he said.

Meanwhile, on the controvers­ial issue of scrapping the electricit­y debts in Soweto, which has been widely criticised, Lesufi said it would improve the living conditions in townships, informal settlement­s and hostels. Soweto’s Eskom debt is around R5 billion and it is estimated that only R512 million of it would be collectibl­e.

“You can only recover R512 million because people are unemployed and some of them are grannies,” he said.

“If you cannot collect that amount of money, then what is the best mechanism?

“The mechanism is to scrap it so that we start afresh and provide the necessary support,” said Lesufi.

“In doing so, we are not encouragin­g those who can afford to pay not to pay. That is why we need to strengthen the user-pays principle.”

Lesufi said he was not blind to the possibilit­y of the problem recurring and would propose to Soweto residents they commit to pay for prepaid electricit­y before the provincial government scrapped their debt.

“If they agree then we will be in a position to push for the total scrapping of this debt.”

Lesufi hit back at those who are against writing off Soweto’s debt, accusing them of having double standards as they did not complain when the e-toll debts were scrapped entirely in the province.

“Debt is debt, it must not have colour, it must not be about race and it must not be about where people stay.

“Scrapping of the debt is to protect the poor, the old and the vulnerable,” he said.

Dumisa indicated he viewed scrapping of the electricit­y debt in Soweto as politickin­g.

“If people listen to what Lesufi said on the scrapping of electricit­y debt, we are going to make the whole culture of non-payment and culture of entitlemen­t worse.

“This country cannot afford that,” he said.

Predicated on principle of state intervenin­g in economy

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa