If the things
we face are greater and more important than the things we refuse
to face, then at least we have begun the re-evaluation
of our world. At least wehave begun to learn to see and live again.
But if we refuse to face any of our awkward and deepest truths,
then
sooner or later, we are going to have to become deaf and blind.
And then, eventually, we are going to have to silence our dreams,
and the dreams of others. In other words, we die. We die in life.
(Ben Okri, 1997)
Madam Speaker
The storm that we spoke of last year has broken, and it is more
severe than anyone anticipated. Confronted with the prospect
of an economic cataclysm, world leaders have announced huge supportive
interventions. A transformation of the world economy is in progress,
which we trust will tame the excesses of unregulated financial
markets. A restructuring of global trade and incomes is underway
which we hope will bring greater opportunities to the world’s
poor. But for now, the transition has brought sizeable disruptions.
The budget that I have the honour to table here today, Madam Speaker,
remains firmly focused on a longer term transformation challenge.
While responding to the changed economic outlook, our primary goal
remains the reconstruction and development of our economy, and
the progressive building of a shared future in which we can take
pride
in the quality of our public services, the creation of jobs for
our people and security in our communities.
And so, in Ben Okri’s words, because we will not silence
our dreams, because we choose life and we will not die, we stand
ready to face our awkward and deepest truths. We will not be deaf
to the voice of those in pain. We will not be blind to incompetence
or greed.
Our response to the present crisis is to face the challenges before
us boldly, and as anation united. Our duty is to construct a South
African approach, founded on our own vision for a shared future.
This approach can only be built on an engagement between social
partners, not just at the level of a national dialogue, but on
factory floors and in community halls. Our resolve will be tested
to its limits. We have to put self-interest aside, we have to face
each other honestly and openly. Our task is to see through the
challenges of economic vulnerability today to the construction
of the new
South Africa that is our passion and our pride. We can do this all
the better as a united people.
In framing this Budget, therefore, we have been guided by five
enduring principles:
• Protecting the poor
• Sustaining employment growth and expanding training opportunities
• Building economic capacity and promoting investment
• Addressing the barriers to competitiveness that limit an equitable
sharing of opportunities
• And, in doing these things we must maintain a sustainable debt
level so that our actions today do not constrain our development
tomorrow.
A global economic crisis
The global economy is experiencing a sharp downturn, spreading
from developed to developing countries. Its origins lie in macroeconomic
imbalances of an unprecedented scale. An accumulation of debt by
firms and households in some countries has been matched by an extraordinary
rise in export earnings and savings in other regions. Behind these
flows are millions of savers and lenders, linked through a financial
architecture of such complexity that neither accounting standards
nor regulatory oversight have served their intended purposes: prudential
banking rules have been overwhelmed by folly and fraud, masquerading
as
financial innovation.
This is a cycle that has played itself out periodically – economic
historian Karl Polanyi, sixty-five years ago, provided a classic
account of how a utopian faith in self-regulation has led repeatedly
to exuberances of this kind in the rise and fall of market economies.
The consequences are felt everywhere. If the balance sheet of a
bank shrinks, its capacity to lend is eroded. If its lending is
curtailed, businesses and households have to reduce their spending.
If demand falls in Birmingham, factories close in Beijing. If production
lines in China slow, demand for commodities from Africa dries up.
The vegetable shop next to the mine closes, and the drivers of
the delivery vehicles are asked to work short time, on half pay,
and if the driver cannot pay his mortgage, the bank forecloses
on his bond, and the bank writes down its balance sheet again...
When a global motor company cuts back on making cars, it cancels
its orders for catalytic converters. Madam Speaker, this firm making
catalytic converters is not in Detroit or in Shanghai, it is here
in the Eastern Cape. The mine producing the platinum that goes
into that converter is near Rustenburg. The worker in the factory
in
Uitenhage and the mineworker in Rustenburg are now without work.
And the woman who runs the little stall selling vegetables outside
the mine is making less money each passing week. And their families,
all of them, face a future made more precarious by the vagaries
of global finance.
In a very short period, Madam Speaker, what started off as a financial
crisis may well become a second great depression. Last year, 2.6
million US workers lost their jobs. This year, twenty million migrant
workers who went home for the Chinese New Year will not return
to the cities, because those jobs have disappeared.
In the past ten months, the International Monetary Fund has revised
its forecast for global growth in 2009 downwards no less than five
times, from 3.8 per cent in April last year to its current estimate
of just half a per cent. Initially the downgrades were focused
on developed countries, but projections for GDP growth in emerging
markets have now halved from 6.6 per cent in April to 3.3 per cent
currently.
The United States has been in recession since the last quarter
of 2007 and its economy is expected to contract by 1.6 per cent
in 2009. The official interest rate has been cut to almost zero.
Growth in Europe has slowed to 1 per cent in 2008 and is forecast
to contract by 2 per cent in 2009. The UK economy is expected to
shrink by 2.8 per cent in 2009.
China’s GDP growth fell to 6.8 per cent in the final quarter
of 2008 and will slow this year to its lowest level since 1990.
India’s growth will
fall by almost half.
Sub-Saharan Africa is feeling the effects of the commodity price
plunge and declining
investor confidence. Projected growth slows to 3.5 per cent in
2009 from 5.4 per cent in 2008.
In responding to the crisis, immense commitments of funds have
been made by the governments of major economies in support of their
financial institutions, and central banks have lowered interest
rates to historically unprecedented levels. However, low interest
rates do not automatically translate into easily available credit.
Households remain wary of further debt, and firms that face trading
losses are not yet creditworthy. In an ironic twist, capital is
leaving emerging markets and flowing into reserve currencies such
as the US dollar or the euro, seemingly undeterred by the institutional
origins of the financial collapse. Countries such as Brazil, India
and
Russia cannot raise
debt except at premium interest rates. South Africa’s cost
of borrowing on international capital markets also increased sharply
late last year and remains high.
Madam Speaker, while many countries are borrowing heavily to finance
their bailouts and deficits, which may well be the correct policy
approach to restore confidence in their economies, this build up
of debt will have to be paid back, with interest, by future generations.
It will require higher tax rates in future, slowing growth for
decades to come. The re-evaluation of the world cannot be indefinitely
deferred.
We should also appreciate that the causes of this crisis run deeper
than its financial
currents. It is embedded in the structure of growth and trade,
and the widening
inequality that we have seen in the past decade and a half. In
responding to this crisis,
on a global scale and here at home, we must tackle its root causes.
Financial systems
cannot go unregulated, trade arrangements cannot be subordinate
to short-sighted
protectionist influence, the distribution of income cannot be entrusted
to the merciless
counterpoise of executive greed and unsupervised labour market
dynamics. In
Polanyi’s words, our task is to harness the instrumentality
of both power and planning in
pursuit of more abundant freedoms. To say that this can be done,
Madam Speaker,
nationally and globally, is to place democratic governance in its
rightful place at the
head of the global development agenda.
And in facing these things that are greater and more important
than the arithmetic of our
revenue and expenditure plans, we will at least begin the re-evaluation
of our world.
This means protecting the poor. It means employment and training.
It means investing in infrastructure and building a competitive
economy. It means sustainable public finances.
Outlook for the South African economy
Let me share with the House the Treasury’s expectation for
the South African economy over the period ahead.
Incomes and output slowed sharply in the second half of last year,
bringing growth for
2008 to about 3.1 per cent. With commodity prices generating lower
export earnings,
weak consumer spending and slowing private sector investment, growth
in 2009 is
forecast to be 1.2 per cent, the lowest rate since 1998. We expect
output growth to
improve in 2010, supported by public infrastructure spending, lower
interest rates, the
2010 FIFA World Cup and a recovery in the world economy. But trading
conditions are
tough and are likely to deteriorate further in the short term.
In 2008, South African producers were affected by a series of economic
shocks including electricity shortages, rising input costs, higher
interest rates and slowing demand. This led to a marked slowdown
in consumer-oriented sectors and weak mining and manufacturing
output. Several sectors, including mining, manufacturing, retail
trade and residential construction, have retrenched workers and
the pace of job losses may accelerate further.
However, civil construction has performed well, supported by ongoing
infrastructure investment. Our agricultural sector has grown strongly
in response to higher prices and better rains.
Sharply lower oil prices – a barrel of crude oil has fallen
by 69 per cent from a peak of US$145 a barrel in July 2008 to about
US$45 per barrel at present – will
help to cut our import bill, but we are also experiencing a fall
in export earnings. The platinum price has fallen by about 60 per
cent, from a high of US$2 254/oz in March 2008 to about US$980/oz
currently, following the decline in world car sales.
Lower consumer demand and the softer real exchange rate will dampen
import demand
in 2009, but infrastructure investment will continue to draw in
capital goods. This will continue to generate a sizeable current
account deficit, expected to average 6.7 per cent a year over the
period ahead.
Over the past five years the financing of our international balance
has been heavily dependent on portfolio inflows to the equity and
bond markets. Though still adequate to
finance the current account deficit, the composition of inflows
changed significantly in 2008, including increased use of loan
financing and repatriation of foreign assets by the banking sector.
Our development expenditure over the period ahead will require
both improved domestic saving and continued capital inflows. And
so a sound banking system, healthy fiscal position, credible monetary
policy and appropriate foreign exchange regulations will continue
to limit our exposure to the international downturn, while serving
as key building blocks in financing future growth and development.
The soundness of South Africa’s financial system was subjected
to an international assessment last year, which concluded that
our banking system is diversified and is supported by an appropriate
financial infrastructure and a generally effective regulatory framework.
Although South African banks were not significantly exposed to
sub-prime related products, they are nonetheless affected by deteriorating
credit conditions. That our banks are mainly capitalised in rands
is an important strength. This is a key element of our evolving
macro-prudential framework.
Nevertheless, it is incumbent on us to remain vigilant, to sharpen
our regulatory oversight and to work with banks to identify any
potential problems early and deal with them decisively. Credit
extension has slowed, probably more rapidly than is desirable.
We expect our banks to continue to extend credit to worthy customers,
noting that it is precisely the rapid withdrawal of credit that
has plunged much of the developed world
into crisis.
Budget policy in a time of crisis
The central goals of economic policy remain accelerating growth
and job creation, broadening economic participation and reducing
poverty. Progress in these areas will be more difficult over the
period ahead. Policy adjustments need to reinforce macroeconomic
stability in the context of a deteriorating international environment
and provide a temporary cushion to the domestic economy. Lower
inflation in the months ahead should contribute to moderating interest
rates.
Under the leadership of President Motlanthe, a task team comprising
of business, organised labour, community organisations and government
has been convened to agree on an appropriate South African response
to the current crisis. Chaired by the managing director of Nedlac,
Mr. Herbert Mkhize, this initiative is rightly focused on both
the immediate response required and
our longer term policy goals.
I have alluded already to the five principles that have informed
our budget planning this year: Protecting the poor, creating employment,
investing in infrastructure, promoting competitiveness and fiscal
sustainability.
The largest adjustments to spending plans go to poverty reduction:
R25 billion is added to the budgets of provinces, mainly for education
and health care, and R13 billion for social assistance grants and
their administration. R4 billion is added to the school nutrition
programme and R2.5 billion goes to municipalities for basic services.
Madam Speaker, the quantum of the rands and cents allocated to
these programmes is not what provides relief. No, we can only be
satisfied when we know that the quality of life of the poor is
improving, that children are being properly educated, that learners
have access to food in schools, that mothers visiting clinics get
proper and dignified treatment, that the criminal justice system
is putting those who rob and thieve behind bars. It’s what
the money buys that matters, and so fixations with the size of
deficits or surpluses are illusory detours.
Secondly, greater effort is needed to accelerate employment growth.
Government will work with business and organised labour to protect
work opportunities and accelerate skills development over the period
ahead. Additional funding over the medium term will go to the Working
for Water and Working on Fire programmes, and R1 billion goes to
the Umsobomvu Youth Fund. R3.7 billion is added for low-income
housing projects and R4.1 billion is set aside for the second phase
of
the expanded public works programme.
I propose that participating departments, provinces and municipalities
should be challenged to exceed their targets for creating EPWP
jobs over the period ahead, and so the contingency reserve this
year has been increased to allow for additional funding of employment
projects in the 2009 Adjustments Appropriation, if sufficient progress
is made.
Building our capacity to grow is the third thrust of our spending
plans. It is reflected in government’s R787 billion infrastructure
investment plans and is a cornerstone of our development contract
with business, organised labour and other social partners. In this
budget a further R6.4 billion is added for public transport, roads
and
rail networks, R4.1 billion for school buildings, clinics and other
provincial infrastructure projects, and R5.3 billion for municipal
infrastructure and bulk water systems. Major investments in power
generation, transport networks and telecommunications are in progress,
building an environment within which mining and industrial development,
tourism and our services economy will prosper, even if the short
term outlook is poor.
Fourthly, a time of restructuring is an opportunity to address
regulatory and microeconomic barriers to our competitiveness. This
involves detailed sectoral analysis, and ongoing consultation with
affected industries and interest groups – it is the key to
sustained, faster, long-term growth. In this budget, R1.6 billion
is added
to industrial development and small enterprise support programmes,
and R1.8 billion goes to rural development and small farmer support.
A further R1 billion is added for electricity demand management,
together with tax incentives for investment in energyefficient
technologies. The new automotive production and development programme
includes a production subsidy, which receives R870 million over
the next
three years. Additional funding also goes to consumer protection,
the competition authorities and enhanced testing capacity of the
SA Bureau of Standards.
The fifth principle is the sustainability of the public finances.
In the present global uncertainty, our task is to respond to the
economic downturn without putting our longterm financial position
at risk. Although the budget deficit will rise to 3.8 per cent
of GDP next year, debt service costs will remain moderate over
the next three years, at about 2.5 per cent of GDP. This is possible
because we have had the courage to make the right choices, over
the past decade.
In 1996 public debt was 48 per cent of GDP and rising. We brought
to this House a macroeconomic strategy that confronted the problem,
boldly and decisively. Today, public debt is 23 per cent of GDP.
Reducing the budget deficit was neither easy nor popular. But it
was the right thing to do, and the outcome is that, year by year,
the burden of debt service costs has declined and resources have
been released to spend on education, health care, housing and infrastructure.
This also means that today we are able to respond to the economic
downturn, boldly and decisively. We are able to announce a countercyclical
fiscal stimulus, on the strength of a secure and sustainable fiscal
position.
Members of the House will know that substantial capital spending
projects are under way in the electricity sector, in the construction
of new commuter rail facilities and in improving the Gauteng freeway
network, that are financed outside of the main budget framework.
Taking the financing needs of these entities into account, the
public sector borrowing requirement for next year is expected to
be 7.5 per cent of GDP, or some R186 billion to be raised from
domestic institutions, investors, multilateral institutions and
portfolio inflows from abroad.
This is a substantial fiscal boost, against the background of the
budget surplus recorded over the three years to 2007/08. But Members
of the House, and fellow South Africans, we are borrowing not to
rescue failed banks or to artificially delay the restructuring
of our industry and trade, but to construct the roads and the power
stations, the classrooms and hospital wards, to modernise technology
and transform public service delivery, as the foundations of growth
and broad-based development in the decades ahead.
The term ‘shovel ready’ has sometimes been used to
distinguish projects that are readyfor implementation from those
that have still to be planned, designed and contracted. We are
fortunate in that so much of our spending programme is not just “shovel
ready”, but is “already shovelling”. The expansion
of our public employment programme has been a year in the planning
and is ready for implementation. Rapid bus transit systems, freeway
improvements, electricity and water systems and rail projects are
under way. And so our roads, our airports and our railway stations
have become construction sites, as millions of inconvenienced commuters
experience daily.
The national budget contributes to the financing of some of these
investments, and there is also a role for our development finance
institutions in supporting state owned enterprises, municipalities
and private companies raise the finance required for major capital
projects.
The success of Siyenza Manje in bringing in skills in support of
municipal infrastructure investment is an example of how a developmental
state can better coordinate its interventions. The Development
Bank of Southern Africa is now considering broadening this model
to support the financial management and delivery capacity of municipalities.
In addition, a proposal to strengthen the balance sheet of the
Development
Bank of Southern Africa is currently under consideration, to enable
it to expand its contribution to financing municipal infrastructure
improvements in partnership with private sector lenders.
Key to transforming rural livelihoods is to better enable small
scale farmers to use land more productively. Improved support to
farmers is important, but access to long term finance is a critical
ingredient too. Following good progress in repairing its integrity
and in giving effect to its core mandate to support agricultural
investment, government will also consider proposals by the board
of the Land Bank to strengthen its balance sheet.
The Industrial Development Corporation is currently assessing its
possible role as a partner in supporting investment and employment
in sectors or industries affected by the cyclical slowdown. Differentiating
the effects of short term cyclical difficulty with the need for
longer term industrial restructuring is difficult and sometimes
involves policy considerations, and so risk sharing with the private
sector has its place in preparing for future growth. At the same
time, government is mindful of the need to avoid passing on risks
to taxpayers that would be better managed in the business sector.
Though there may be a role for public funds in support of businesses
in difficulty, we need to ensure that an undue capitalisation of
private wealth does not result in a financial burden of debt on
future generations.
Madam Speaker, there is also an expanding role for our housing
finance institutions, and for the agencies that support small enterprise
development and economic empowerment transactions in the evolution
of our development finance architecture. These are the instrumentalities
of our developmental state, not in isolation from the wider financial
system, but sharing risk, co-financing investment and jointly engaging
with the banking sector in constructing a vibrant growing economy.
Public expenditure plans: growth, employment and social development
Total government spending next year, Madam Speaker, will amount
to R834
billion,
including the second tranche of the R60 billion loan to Eskom and
an unallocated contingency reserve of R6 billion. Real growth in
spending on public services will
average 5.1 per cent over the next three years. Let me elaborate
briefly on some of the
key spending proposals that are provided for in the medium term
expenditure framework set out in this year’s Budget Review
and the Estimates of National
Expenditure.
Education
Government’s contribution to public education remains our
single largest investment,
because we know that it is the key to reducing poverty and accelerating
long-term economic growth. Education spending has grown by 14 per
cent a year for the past
three years and accounts for R140.4 billion in the spending plans
of provinces and
national government for 2008/09.
We received a tip from Mr. Xolani Notshe of Port Elizabeth thanking
us for allocating money to libraries. He says “libraries
are central in community development. Libraries will assist your
successor to collect more taxes because we would be an educated
and skilled nation”. I agree entirely.
Key priorities in education include extending the no-fee schools
policy to 60 per cent of
schools, from 40 per cent at present, expanding the school nutrition
programme,
reducing average class sizes in schools serving lower income communities,
increasing
expenditure on school buildings, strengthening teacher training
programmes and
recapitalising technical high schools over the next three years.
An additional
R700 million is allocated for higher education subsidies and to
accommodate the
anticipated growth in student enrolment from 783 900 last year
to 836 800 in 2011. The
National Student Financial Aid Scheme receives an additional R330
million. Funding is
provided for a new National Education Evaluation Unit.
Many South Africans will agree, I am sure, with Mr. Paul King who
writes, “Regarding
the salaries of teachers, I personally feel that we do not reward
them enough for what
they do and what we expect from them in terms of the daily care
and education of our
children.” Madam Speaker, a new salary dispensation for teachers
was introduced last
year, linked to school and teacher performance, hence the urgency
of establishing this
new Evaluation Unit.
Health services
A new unit to address the quality of service provision is also
included in our health
spending proposals. This will be named the National Office for
Standards Compliance,
and it will set and audit norms and standards for hospitals and
primary care centres.
We are profoundly conscious of the complexity of the challenges
facing our health
services, and the strain on resources associated with a rising
disease burden. Policy
interventions supported in this budget focus both on health facilities
and services and on
more aggressively combating the causes of ill-health. An additional
R1.8 billion is
budgeted to introduce three new child vaccines, which have proved
effective in
preventing infant and child deaths. The tuberculosis and HIV and
Aids programmes
both receive additional resources. We are budgeting to extend screening
of pregnant
mothers coming into the public health system and to phase in an
improved drug
regimen to prevent mother-to-child HIV transmission. Our anti-retroviral
programme now
covers 630 000 people, and the medium term expenditure framework
provides for an
increase to 1.4 million by 2011/12.
The 2009 Budget makes provision for further improvements in the
remuneration of health professionals, and for continued expansion
of the hospital revitalisation programme. A total of 31 hospitals
are under construction, 18 of which will be completed over the
next three years.
The development of a national health insurance system is aimed
at improving the equity
of health care financing and enhancing the quality of care for
all South Africans. These
are complex reforms and the task team on social security has been
mandated to
conduct research and advise on the way forward.
Fighting crime
The fight against crime is drawing on the work of the criminal
justice sector review. Efforts to overhaul the forensic and investigative
capacity of the police are under way, together with enhanced use
of available technology. A further R5.4 billion is allocated to
interventions aimed at improving criminal justice services, the
creation of an
integrated fingerprint and DNA database, improving detective capacity,
upgrading IT and telecommunications systems and increasing the
number of
police officials from 183 000 last year to over 204 000 in 2011/12.
Funding is provided for additional policing capacity during the
2010 FIFA World Cup, for construction of new prisons and for implementation
of the Child Justice Bill.
Agricultural support and rural development
A notable tip on to the current economic situation and the steps
which can be taken to alleviate its effects came from Mr Lazarus
Lamola of Polokwane. He writes that when he was a teenager, “the
villagers used to plough their land and harvest enough food to
last at least a year. There was plenty of maize, beans and other
vegetables,
and except for drastic drought years, we would never go hungry.
The subsistence farming system has totally collapsed in many areas.
It is sad to see vast amounts of land go to waste when we have
a food price problem.” He suggests the encouragement
of partnerships between private farmers and villagers to once again
use the land for food production and sustenance.
Madam Speaker, increasing agricultural output, raising rural incomes,
supporting small scale farmers and investing in rural roads are
key objectives of government’s rural development strategy.
The budgets of the Illema/Letsema campaign, which distributes agricultural
starter packs to poor households, the comprehensive agricultural
support programme and allocations to targeted rural infrastructure
projects receive a further R1.2 billion boost. The budget for land
reform and land restitution over the next three years totals R20.3
billion.
Investing in housing and municipal infrastructure
Housing and the eradication of informal settlements remain at the
forefront of our infrastructure investment plans, and impact significantly
on both employment creation and poverty reduction. In the past
three years, the municipal infrastructure grant programme has spent
about R32 billion. Over the next three years, infrastructure grants
to municipalities total R67 billion, and a further R45 billion
will
be spent on the Breaking New Ground housing programme. Together
with investment in roads and public transport, these constitute
one of the largest areas of expansion of public sector spending,
and are rightly prioritised as part of our response to the current
deterioration in employment and economic activity.
Social grants
The budget adds R13.2 billion to our social grants programme. The
extension of the child support grant to 15 takes effect this year
and the reduction in the eligible age for men to 60 is in progress.
Strengthening our social security safety net is critical during
this period when many more poor families are vulnerable.
With effect from April this year, the maximum values of the old
age, disability and care dependency grants will rise by R50 to
R1010 a month, the foster care grant will increase to R680 and
child support will rise to R240 a month. Compelling evidence that
the phasing-in of the child support grant has contributed significantly
to reducing child poverty has emerged in recent research, and so
consideration is being given, subject to affordability, to the
extension of the child support grant to the age of 18.
Madam Speaker, the budget papers contain details of many more areas
of public expenditure – increased allocations for roads and
commuter transport services, an allocation to the Universal Access
Services Agency to subsidise set-top boxes as part of the digital
television broadcasting initiative, an expansion in training capacity
for the Reserve Force of the Department of Defence, upgraded IT
systems for the Department of Home Affairs and to modernise immigration
and customs services at border control points. Funding goes to
the Independent Electoral Commission for 30 000 barcode scanners
and 105 000 transparent ballot boxes. We are budgeting for R1.6
billion for South African Airways to support its turnaround strategy,
which includes reducing costs and improving efficiency. I am sure
that the House will agree with my hope that this will not be a
recurring allocation.
Efficiency and effectiveness
Budgeting is not only about expanding expenditure on constructive
and necessary activities, it is also about rooting out waste, promoting
cost-efficiency and phasing out ineffective programmes. Departments
have again been asked to identify savings, and cuts amounting to
R19 billion were effected in the final stages of preparing the
2009 Budget.
In the period ahead, it will be necessary to take stronger action
in pursuit of efficiency and better targeted expenditure. There
is insufficient control of foreign travel, advertising and public
relations activities and consultancy services. Stricter oversight
of the activities and executive remuneration in agencies and government
enterprises is also required. I believe, Madam Speaker, that Parliament
and our committees should play a more active role in challenging
accounting officers to plan their efficiency saving initiatives
up front, and report regularly on progress. A greater sense of
responsibility needs to permeate the ethos of government all the
way through the accountability chain.
Madam speaker, the next few years are going to be tougher. If we
are to afford continued expansion of social services and our social
wage, then, in addition to the need for greater efficiency, we
have to conduct a thorough assessment of all of government’s
programmes to see how we can improve value for money and to identify
areas where we can eliminate or reduce wastage. The Ministers’ Committee
on the Budget intends, in its handover report to the new administration,
to propose that the incoming President announce a Comprehensive
Expenditure Review. Its aim would be to ensure that as we spend
more, we also spend better. In addition, should confront the awkward
truth that there are programmes of government that do not work,
and on which we should spend less.
Revenue estimates and tax proposals
Madam Speaker, the revised estimate of revenue for 2008/09 is R14.2
billion less than we planned in the 2008 Budget. For the year ahead,
the main budget revenue estimate is R50 billion lower than we projected
in February last year, against the background of slower growth,
depressed trade and declining company profits.
In setting the gross tax revenue target of R659 billion for the
year ahead, we have taken into account the need to provide relief
to households and encouragement to the business sector, while continuing
to broaden the tax base through which the requirements of the fiscus
have to be met.
Personal income tax
The proposed adjustment to the personal income tax schedules will
provide relief of R13.6 billion to individual taxpayers, compensating
fully for the effects of inflation and providing further relief
mainly to lower and middle income earners. The tax-free income
threshold next year will be R54 200 for taxpayers below the age
of 65 and
R84 200 for those over 65.
It is gratifying to note that there has again been excellent progress
in expanding the number of registered taxpayers. In view of progress
in simplifying the tax return process and the waiver of the annual
filing requirement for qualifying taxpayers, it is proposed that
the current Standard Income Tax on Employees system should be discontinued
by 2010. I appreciate that the administrative reforms, the adjustment
to efiling arrangements and the construction of more effective
communication channels between SARS and individual taxpayers are
huge reform projects, on the one hand, and sources of numerous
personal inconveniences, on the other. But we are getting there,
and these improvements will serve as a platform for improved fiscal
integrity for decades to come.
Mineral and petroleum royalties
After discussions with both labour and the mining industry and
taking into account the potential impact of the economic slowdown
on the mining industry, I propose to defer the mining royalties
regime from this year to 2010. This provides a boost to the industry
of about R1.8 billion, which will assist in minimising job losses.
I have agreed with the mineworkers’ unions and the Minister
of Minerals and Energy that government will consider establishing
an agency, to be jointly managed by business, labour and government,
to invest in economic development in mining towns or labour-sending
areas affected by retrenchments.
Madam Speaker, perhaps it is because miners are used to digging
deeper, that their creativity and commitment to improve conditions
for mining communities serve as an example of the kinds of partnership
required to ensure that South Africa emerges stronger from this
global crisis. If the new development agency can be established
this year, we will make an allocation towards its activities in
the adjustments budget.
Environmental fiscal measures
Tax tips continue to make up the majority of the tips submitted.
Mr. Saul Margolis of Johannesburg called for a tax to be imposed
on incandescent light bulbs to encourage people to use compact
fluorescent lightbulbs and save energy. Mr. Margolis, I have asked
that this be included in the revenue proposals this year.
We propose taking further steps to encourage energy efficiency
and reduce harmful emissions, some of which have tax implications.
• An incentive for investments by companies in energy-efficient equipment
will be introduced, in the form of a supplementary depreciation
allowance.
• The levy on plastic shopping bags will be increased from 3 cents
to 4 cents.
• An increase is proposed in the international air passenger departure
tax, which was last raised in 2005/06.
• The existing excise duties on motor vehicles will be adjusted to
take into account carbon emissions.
It is important, furthermore that we should encourage South African
companies to take advantage of the clean development mechanism
established in the Kyoto Protocol. A favourable tax treatment will
therefore be introduced for the recognition of income derived from
the sale of emission reductions, as certified through this mechanism.
Customs and excise duties
The tax code discourages another category of atmospheric emissions,
Madam Speaker. I refer to the duties on tobacco products. This
year’s
increase in the duty on cigarettes and cigars is 13 per cent, with
somewhat lower increases in respect of cigarette and pipe tobacco.
A packet of 20 cigarettes will cost 88 cents more. I should also
advise that a bottle of wine will cost 10.5 cents more, and a can
of beer 7 cents more. Mr At du Plooy has written to ask, “please
be a little more lenient on the tax on whisky for the old folks.
We have so little to enjoy, you know things that used to happen
after dark, no longer happen. All we have left to enjoy is a little
entertainment before supper.” He asks for leniency, reminding
me that this will ultimately be for my own benefit as well. A bottle
of whisky, Mr. du Plooy, goes up by R3.21.
Fuel levies
As road-users, Madam Speaker, we have gained some advantage since
mid-2008 from lower international oil prices. As road-users we
also know that there is a substantial increase in spending on maintenance
and construction under way, and we still face a heavy burden of
road accidents and associated compensation claims. These are costs
that have to be covered, and so there will be increases in the
fuel
levies on 1 April this year, of 23 cents and 24 cents per litre
in respect of the general petrol and diesel levies, and 17.5 cents
in the road accident fund levy.
As indicated last year, it is proposed that the general fuel levy
should form part of a new municipal revenue arrangement to replace
the former Regional Service Council levies. In 2009/10, 23 per
cent of the general fuel levy will be earmarked for metropolitan
municipalities to support expenditure on roads and transportation
infrastructure.
VAT and Tax administration
Over the years, we have received many tips from people running
small businesses, calling for an increase in the VAT registration
thresholds. Mr. Ivan Faught wrote in 2003 that “such a change
would make it easier to work oneself up to entrepreneurial status.” Effective
from this year, the VAT threshold is increased from R300 000 to
R1 million.
Several administrative reforms are also in progress at SARS, including
customs modernisation in support of the rapidly changing trade
environment, and improved use of technology and third-party information
to authenticate data and reduce the need for supporting documents.
I am pleased to announce that taxpayers, practitioners and employers
can look forward to the return of the traditional tax season deadlines
this year. The Tax Season 2009 timetable includes a 60 day reconciliation
period for employers in April and May. Tax season for individuals
starts in July. The deadline for submission of income tax returns
for individuals and trusts is 18 September for manual filers and
20
November for electronic submissions.
Tips for Trevor
Madam Speaker, I need to thank those many South Africans who have
contributed to the “Tips for Trevor” campaign. Since
it was first introduced nearly 10 years ago, you have sent over
20 000 suggestions, including 2 363 this year.
Your voices have been heard, in countless ways. You advised in
the early years that the child support grant should be extended
above its initial age threshold of 7, and that has been done. You
advised that public benefit organizations needed greater tax relief,
and that has been done. You advised that the tax treatment of retirement
fund withdrawals was too onerous, and so that has been revised.
You have advised in no uncertain terms that the SARS call centre
is dysfunctional, and so that is being fixed, as we speak.
The call for the provision of free anti-retroviral treatment was
another topic that persistently featured over the years. Jackie
Mondi of Berario wrote an extensive tip in 2003, calling for a “special
fund for fighting HIV/AIDS; that focus should be on both care and
prevention.” In 2004 government was able to roll-out
ARV treatment in public health facilities around the country for
those living with HIV and Aids. Recent tips reflect appreciation
of this, such as the one from Gemi Malau who wrote: “I
think the budget needs to be commended as it is now focusing on
HIV/AIDS.”
Conclusion
At this time last year, Madam Speaker, we noted that “…as
with the weather…,, economic trends do not stop at border
posts, they carry no passports, yet they have the potential to
wreak havoc, even when plans have been carefully laid.” Every
corner of the globe is affected by the economic turmoil that we
are currently experiencing. It is not just that the adjustments
to the economic crisis may be difficult or expensive, there is
also the uncertainty about the burden that will be visited on future
generations by the interventions being contemplated today.
Nouriel Roubini, an economist popularly credited with predicting
the present financial crisis, recently said, “...while this
crisis does not imply the end of market economy capitalism, it
has shown the failure of a particular model of capitalism: the
laissez
faire unregulated (or aggressively deregulated), wild-west model
of free market capitalism without prudential regulation and supervision
of financial markets and with the lack of proper provision of public
goods by governments.”
Fellow South Africans, our response to the challenge before us
builds on policies we have consistently pursued over the past decade
and half: sound prudential regulation of the financial sector and
a strong emphasis on the provision of public goods by government.
Last week, President Motlanthe summarised our response to this
financial crisis.[State Of the Nation Address]
• Over the next three years, we will invest R787 billion in the infrastructure
needed for future growth and development.
• We will accelerate the Expanded Public Works Programme, and work
with business to mitigate job losses and accelerate skills development
• We will strengthen our development finance institutions, and support
industrial restructuring and agricultural development
• Our social assistance programmes will reach over 13 million people
and public expenditure on education and health care will increase
strongly.
But it is not the numbers in the Budget that will measure the quality
of our response to the present crisis, Madam Speaker, but the character
of our resolve to work together, putting others before ourselves,
confident in the choices we have made and committed to face our
awkward and deepest truths.
Madam Speaker, there will be a new administration in place next
year, and there will no doubt be new insights on which to draw
in framing the next budget and medium term expenditure framework.
But the National Treasury as a source of economic and fiscal expertise
will still be in place, and I want to commend to the House the
constructive role that the Treasury plays in absorbing and synthesizing
a vast tapestry of economic and financial statistics, policy documents
and programme information, as part of the process of preparing
the national budget proposals.
After drawing on advice from so many diverse quarters, I am also
indebted to my colleagues in Cabinet who share with me the collective
responsibility for the overall integrity and coherence of the Budget.
President Mbeki, and in recent months President Motlanthe, have
provided the leadership and good judgment required to bring the
budget process to a conclusion, ably supported by Deputy Presidents
Mlambo- Ngcuka and Mbete.
I am especially indebted to members of the Ministers Committee
on the Budget, who have set aside their time, reviewed lengthy
budget memoranda and engaged with insight and energy in the debates
that contribute to refining the spending proposals.
Deputy Minister Jabu Moleketi served the Treasury with distinction,
notably in representing the fiscus on the Local Organising Committee
for the FIFA World Cup. His successor, Nhlanhla Nene, has brought
a keen eye for detail to the final stages of the budget process.
The MEC’s for Finance have again been generous
in sharing their experience and insights and in dealing with difficult
challenges this year – I wish to express a personal appreciation
for their support and dedication to the cause of sound public finance.
Our collective thanks are due also to:
• Governor Tito Mboweni, whose leadership of the Reserve Bank is
cause for both pride and confidence in our monetary management
and banking supervision
• Commissioner Pravin Gordhan and the staff of the South African
Revenue Service, who continue to serve the nation and the fiscus
with dedication beyond the call of duty
• Mr Howard Gabriels, chair of the Statistics Council, Statistician-General
Pali Lehohla and the staff of Stats SA, whose economic reports
in recent months have sometimes brought unwelcome news, but nonetheless
timely and comprehensive
• The Financial and Fiscal Commission and its chairperson, Dr Bethuel
Setai, whose advice remains critical to the integrity of our intergovernmental
fiscal system
•
NEDLAC, its Managing Director, Mr Herbert Mkhize,
and representatives of the business, labour and community constituencies
on the Public Finance
and Monetary Chamber, particularly for their efforts to bring coherence
to a national perspective on the current economic crisis and how
we should respond
• The Honourable Arthur Moloto and Honourable Tutu Ralane who chair
the Portfolio and Select Committees on Finance respectively and
to the joint chairs of the Budget committee, Honourable Louisa
Mabe and Honourable Elliot Sogoni. Lesetja Kganyago leads the National
Treasury team with unflagging energy.
The staff in the Ministry still tolerate me with good grace and
endless patience.
I also have to thank my family for support and inspiration.
Nineteen years ago, on this date, in this city, just 200 meters
down the road, former President Mandela stepped up to the podium
to make his first address as a free man. He said, and I quote, “The
need to unite the people of our country is as important a task
now as it has always been. No individual leader is able to take
on
this enormous task on his own.”
Madam Speaker, these words remain profoundly relevant today.
Fellow South Africans, we cannot promise an easy road ahead, or
a rapid resolution of the economic and social challenges we face.
But we know that the choices we have made set us on a path of shared
growth and broadening participation in a fairer and more dynamic
economy – there is hard work to be done if we
are to achieve the transformation we seek. To travel this road
with confidence, we must remain united.
Ngiyabonga
[State Of the Province
Address]
[Provincial Budget Speech]
[State Of the Nation Address]