Wednesday, October 17, 2018

TREASURY: RECESSION, FALLING REVENUE DENT SA’S PUBLIC FINANCES
DG Dondo Mogajane said Treasury was preparing to implement structural and regulatory reforms to enhance growth.

Treasury’s Director-General Dondo Mogajane. Picture: @SAgovnews/Twitter

Reuters

CAPE TOWN - South Africa will struggle to finance the public services that form the largest part of its budget due to falling revenues and an economic recession, the National Treasury told lawmakers on Tuesday.

Africa’s most industrialised economy slipped into recession in the second quarter for the first time in nearly a decade and faced the political uncertainty that caused turmoil in its currency and financial markets over its finance minister.

“The contraction of our public finances is placing tremendous stress on us and our ability to finance public services and this threatens the affordability of planned expenditure,” Treasury’s Director-General Dondo Mogajane told a parliamentary committee.

Mogajane said Treasury was preparing to implement structural and regulatory reforms to enhance growth and would be sticking to the fiscal sustainability promises it made in the February budget. It was not clear when the reforms would be introduced.

President Cyril Ramaphosa last week appointed Tito Mboweni as the country’s fourth finance minister in two years, replacing Nhlanhla Nene who admitted to having meetings with the business family at the centre of alleged corruption.

The move to appoint the former governor of the central bank to head Treasury was well received by financial markets, but the focus will remain on Ramaphosa’s ability to jumpstart growth, deliver jobs and close the huge budget deficits that have brought the country to the brink of rating downgrades to junk.

The revenue gap in the 2017/18 fiscal year that runs to end-March ballooned to R50.8 billion as the revenue agency missed Treasury’s collection target, putting pressure on the government’s already stretched finances.

Treasury warned in September that it may also see a shortfall in revenue collection in the current fiscal year.

Mboweni is due to present the medium-term budget speech next Wednesday.

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