Treasury: Fiscal Outlook Faces Significant Risks


By Joburg Post

South Africa faces “significant risks” to its fiscal outlook, including weak economic growth and uncertain revenue collection, the National Treasury said in its 2019/20 annual performance report, put before Parliament yesterday. 

The economy of Africa’s most industrialised country contracted 3.2percent in the first quarter, its worst performance in a decade as President Cyril Ramaphosa’s growth drive struggled to gain traction. 

“Risks to the fiscal outlook remain significant and include weak economic growth, uncertainty in the revenue outlook, and the poor financial position of major SOCs (state-owned companies),” 

said the National Treasury.

Big state-owned companies including power utility Eskom, arms-maker Denel and South African Airways have asked the government for additional bailouts to ensure they can continue operating. South Africa is weighing extra options to support Eskom, which has implemented widespread power cuts, including swopping its debt for government bonds or ring-fencing it in a special account, a senior treasury official said last week.
 

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni was expected to provide further details on the government plans to accelerate funding from a R230 billion government guarantee to Eskom during his budget vote speech this evening. “External factors, including a general rise in bond yields, slowing global growth, higher interest rates and further exchange rate depreciation, will also play a major role in government’s ability to narrow the budget balance and stabilise debt,” the National Treasury said in its report.

Moody’s, the last of the big three international credit ratings agencies to assign South Africa investment-grade status, lowered its forecast for economic growth this year to 1 percent from 1.3 percent after the first-quarter contraction.

Reuters

-JP

Article Tags

Fiscal Policy

Moody's

Tito Mboweni

Economic Growth

South Africa

Economy

Cancel

    Most Read