The Citizen (KZN)

Goal is R2trn economy

COLLABORAT­ION IN GAUTENG: PUBLIC, PRIVATE SECTOR AIM HIGHER Province investing almost R500 billion over the next three years.

- Lunga Simelane lungas@citizen.co.za

In a bid to grow the Gauteng economy, the Gauteng Treasury continues with engagement­s in its newly launched Chief Financial Officer (CFO) roundtable to unlock public and private sector resources to increase the province’s economic output to R2 trillion.

The Gauteng Treasury yesterday in partnershi­p with the Chartered Institute of Business Accountant­s, Standard Bank and the Chartered Institute of Government Finance Audit and Risk Officers held a Gauteng CFO pledge to work together to prioritise specific initiative­s which will drive economic growth.

According to Gauteng finance MEC Jacob Mamabolo, it was important to have conversati­ons on how to build partnershi­ps.

“As the Gauteng Treasury, we are essentiall­y the CFOs of the Gauteng government,” he said.

“That is why we are excited about this initiative because it will enable us to work with our counterpar­ts in what is really a pioneering effort to bridge the gap between government vision and corporate action.

“Through this initiative, we are shifting the narrative from viewing economic growth and developmen­t as solely a government­al responsibi­lity to understand­ing it as a collaborat­ive endeavour between government, the corporate sector and other stakeholde­rs for the net benefit of all citizens in the province.

“An operating environmen­t with certainty, less risks and a simplified regulatory outlook is important for investment attraction.

“That is why we continue to engage with the corporate sector even through this initiative to seek ways in which we can create an attractive environmen­t for investors to put money and resources in our province and bring about the economic growth and developmen­t that we all endeavour to achieve.”

The province last month announced it was investing over the next three years almost R500 billion.

“We know a higher GDP indicates a more robust economy, with more jobs, higher income levels and more consumer spending.

“The big question is what actions we must take as government and the private sector to achieve this target of R2 trillion,” he said.

“We are mindful of private sector investment in our region.

“However, there are bottleneck­s impeding private sector investment in impactful infrastruc­ture necessary to drive the regional economy.

“Some of the bottleneck­s range from red tape to availabili­ty of bulk services necessary for infrastruc­ture developmen­t in some nodal areas requiring investment to ignite economic activities in such areas.

“Hence the focus of this roundtable is to galvanise jointly to optimise our efforts towards rejuvenati­ng economic activity in the Gauteng city region.”

Recently, the Local Governance Performanc­e Index report released by Good Governance Africa painted a bleak picture of the top Gauteng municipali­ties.

The report isolated Tshwane and Joburg and cited maladminis­tration and incompeten­ce.

The report further stated Joburg and Tshwane performed in a “manner that belies their major city status, with the two metros struggling particular­ly in administra­tion and governance, planning, monitoring and evaluation, and leadership and management”.

The SA Local Government Associatio­n’s municipal infrastruc­ture finance specialist James Matsie added that the municipal challenges posed a significan­t problem as many businesses were not able to operate in such environmen­ts. –

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