Read the finance minister’s 2024 medium-term budget statement
Read the finance minister’s 2024 medium-term budget statement
Domestic Outlook Domestically, we forecast a real GDP growth of 1.1% in 2024.
This is lower than the estimate of 1.3% in February. Over the medium term, growth is forecast to average 1.8%. This underscores the need for higher inclusive growth to meet the aspiration of a better life for all. This policy statement outlines our strategy to lift the economy to a higher and more inclusive growth path.
The strategy is anchored on four pillars:
One is maintaining macroeconomic stability;Two is implementing structural reforms;Three is supporting growth-enhancing infrastructure; andFour is building state capability.
Fostering faster inclusive growth
Honourable members, pillar one is about a stable, transparent and predictable macroeconomic framework that creates a conducive environment for businesses and households to save, spend, invest and grow.
The National Treasury has the responsibility for oversight and implementation of the macroeconomic policy framework. Anchoring inflation expectations is important for our macroeconomic policy framework, and this what the Reserve Bank is responsible for.
To strengthen this framework, we continue to work on assessing the suitability of monetary policy targets, and to improve the levers of macroeconomic policy co-ordination.
Pillar two is about implementing structural reforms, including those in Operation Vulindlela. These will continue to strengthen the economy to be more productive and internationally competitive, accelerate inclusive economic growth and foster much-needed job creation. The first phase of Operation Vulindlela provides tangible evidence that structural reforms can reduce economic bottlenecks.
It also demonstrates that government can collaborate effectively with business for the collective good. Some of the achievements of Operation Vulindlela include:
A large pipeline of about 22,500MW of private sector investments in renewable energy projects; A 50% reduction in the cost of data for a 1.5GB bundle; A reduction in the waiting period for obtaining water use licence, from almost a year to 90 days; and Introduction of an eVisa system to travellers from 34 countries. 2024
Medium term budget policy statement
Building on these successes, the second phase will continue to prioritise network sectors. In the energy sector, we will continue to restructure the electricity supply industry, establish a competitive electricity generation market, and alleviate constraints on transmission infrastructure. In transport, we will open the freight rail network to private operators to reduce inefficiencies and costs.
In water, the focus is on creating independent economic regulation and strengthening the local water services regulatory environment. The second phase will also introduce new focus areas that seek to strengthen local government, harness digital infrastructure and integrate urban environments to make cities more efficient.
Infrastructure
Pillar three is about effective infrastructure investment, to boost economic activity and enable higher growth over the medium term.
In this regard, we are implementing reforms that will create conditions to attract greater private sector participation. The reforms include mobilising significant private sector financing and technical expertise to augment the limited public sector capacity and capability.
We are amending the PPP regulations to simplify requirements for undertaking these projects.
The amended Treasury Regulation 16 will be published before the end of November for implementation in 2025/26. The Municipal PPP Regulations 309 will be finalised by June next year.
We are establishing dedicated capacity to plan, prepare and design programmes that will generate a credible pipeline of projects that can be taken to the market:
The department of water & sanitation’s Water Partnerships Office has two priority programmes for nonrevenue water and recycling wastewater that require private investments. Similarly, the department of transport, Transnet and the Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa are finalising a list of priority projects that will be issued to the market in 2025/26. The resolution of the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Project has unlocked a project pipeline to the value of R85bn for the nontoll network over the next three years. We are improving the capital budgeting process. The Budget Facility for Infrastructure is being reconfigured into a centralised gateway for all large infrastructure projects that require fiscal support to advance. From 2025, the facility will have a continuous evaluation process instead of one window per annum. The National Treasury will, in January 2025, publish a circular to guide the submission of proposals. Lastly, government is making a concerted effort to increase the pool of funders to diversify public infrastructure financing through new mechanisms and instruments. These include build-operate-transfer (BOT) structures and other concessions.
We are developing a blended finance risk-sharing platform that includes a credit guarantee vehicle that will help de-risk public-sector projects while reducing government’s contingent liabilities. Fiscal support is proposed for the projects evaluated in the 2024 BFI window.
This includes, but is not limited to two hospital projects, including a district hospital in Limpopo; landside capacity expansions at the Cape Town Container Terminal; capacity upgrades on the rail network from Watloo to Gqeberha; rehabilitation of water infrastructure in eThekwini; and student housing accommodation at six higher education institutions.
A request for proposals will be issued this year for funders who are interested in supporting these projects, as well as projects for urban rail revitalisation, disaster relief and metropolitan trading services. Funding for these will be separated from broader sovereign borrowing and be accounted for separately.
Collectively, the infrastructure reforms will strengthen planning, appraisal, contracting, financing, and monitoring and evaluation.
The outcome will be faster delivery of infrastructure that supports economic growth, the expansion of access to basic services and boosting job creation.
Fiscal outlook
Madam speaker, our fiscal strategy sets to out to achieve the fiscal sustainability needed to support inclusive economic growth.
It carefully weighs competing demands, making the necessary trade-offs between what is most urgent and what must wait given the fiscal constraints.
The strategy also supports critical social services and addresses the significant fiscal and economic risks that lie ahead. It does this by prioritising the following four key actions:
First, it stabilises government debt by maintaining sufficiently large primary surpluses over the rest of the decade. As announced in the 2024 Budget, a debt-stabilising primary surplus will continue to anchor fiscal policy over the next three years; Second, it focuses on maintaining higher levels of investment by directing a growing share of public spending towards capital projects; Third, it protects critical services in the context of constrained budget resources. We do this by protecting the social wage, which supports the most vulnerable through spending on health, education, social protection, community development and employment programmes.Lastly, it focuses on the growth in the public-service wage bill by ensuring that public servants are compensated fairly, while implementing measures to contain overall costs.
Speaker, to achieve the goals of our fiscal strategy, we must better manage our debt. Debt has risen too fast and is too high. We are anticipating that government debt will reach more than R6.05-trillion, or 75.5% of GDP, in 2025/26.
We know that our debt is unsustainable, because debt-service costs have become the largest component of our spending and it is rising faster than economic growth.
Debt-service costs will reach R388.9bn in the current financial year. Put differently, this means for every one rand of revenue that government raises this year, 22c of this is paid in debt-service costs.
To deal with this problem, we have taken difficult steps to reduce the budget deficit. We have restrained spending and maintained stable tax collection.
As a result of our measures, government achieved a primary budget surplus in 2023/24, for the first time in 15 years.
As I said earlier, the surplus is needed for us to stabilise debt. The primary surplus is not a pot of money.
Rather, it is the difference between what government spends, excluding debt-service costs and what government collects in revenue. Over the medium term, the main budget deficit will decline from 4.7 per cent of GDP in 2024/25 to 3.4% in 2027/28, with the primary budget surplus rising to 1.8% of GDP.
The primary surplus will be sufficient for debt to stabilise at 75.5% in 2025/26.
Debt will then decline over the rest of this decade. The key impact of this is that debt-service costs will also stabilise and begin to decline over the next few years.
Revenue adjustments and medium-term outlook Speaker, on the revenue side, tax collection for 2024/25 is expected to be R22.3 billion lower than what we estimated in February.
Over the next two years, the main budget revenue estimate has also been lowered by R31.2 billion.
In the absence of faster growth and in the face of external risks, tax revenue will remain under pressure, forcing us to make difficult decisions on where to spend.
Lower revenue also means that we cannot, within the envelope, accommodate all of the demands on the fiscus. Difficult trade-offs, in all spheres of government, will have to be made. By sticking to our debt-reducing strategy and confronting these trade-offs, we can create the necessary conditions for a fast-growing economy that facilitates employment.
Expenditure adjustments and medium-term outlook Our most immediate spending pressures will be addressed, despite the weaker revenue.
Compared to our estimates in February, expenditure for this year will increase mainly for the following:
Rollovers from the previous financial year to the value of R2.1 billion; R2.7 billion expenditure that was announced at the time of the main budget, mainly for the Covid-19 social relief of distress grant; Unforeseeable and unavoidable expenditure of R2.1 billion, mainly for disaster relief. A special appropriation bill that mostly covers SANRAL’s obligations related to phase 1 of the Gauteng Freeway Improvement Programme. A large part of this appropriation is made possible by the Gauteng Provincial Government honouring its R3.8 billion contribution to the debt this year.
Over the medium term, consolidated expenditure is expected to increase from R2.4 trillion in 2024/25 to R2.8 trillion in 2027/28. Honourable Members, our democracy is underpinned by strong independent arms of the state.
The medium-term spending adjustments are aimed at maintaining the integrity of key institutions and improving state capability.
This is what pillar four is about. It seeks to build a capable state that delivers a reasonable and reliable standard of public service that will foster the necessary environment for more growth and jobs. For this reason, additional funding is proposed for Parliament and the Office of the Chief Justice, mostly to enhance operational capacity in the running of these important institutions.
With the Local Government Elections due in 2026, funds have been set for the Independent Electoral Commission to conduct smooth elections. Additional funding for the South African Revenue Service is proposed. This is to help the organisation build on its successes by driving programmes to enhance the efficiency of revenue collection, whilst enhancing compliance and facilitating legitimate trade.
We are also implementing initiatives like early retirement, not to merely reduce the size of the workforce, but also to introduce younger talent to the public service.
This is part of building a capable, ethical and developmental government. We will be harnessing digital infrastructure to roll out critical systems in the provision of service delivery in the following focus areas:
Digitising and simplifying the application and disbursement process for social grants; Broadening access to employment pathways; Rolling out digital identification documents; Building a centralised and accessible website for all government services; and Digitising health records management for the rollout of National Health Insurance.
Madam Speaker, government proposes allocating 47.9 per cent of available non-interest spending to national departments, 42.3% to provinces, and 9.8% to local government in 2025/26. Over time, the share of nationally raised revenue has steadily shifted towards local government.
In 2014/15, 8.9% of non-interest main budget expenditure was transferred to local government, compared to the nearly 10% that it now receives.
The 2025 MTEF period will see the implementation of the first phase of the recommendations of the conditional grant review that the National Treasury completed earlier this year.
This includes the merging of various conditional grants, such as the Education Infrastructure Grant and the School Infrastructure Backlogs Grant.
The aim is to reduce duplication in the management of programmes, and to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of public spending. 2
We are also undertaking amendments to the Public Finance Management Act and the Municipal Finance Management Act. This process of modernising public financial management was started by the previous administration and will continue over the next months. We will publish the draft pieces of legislation next year.
Local government
Madam Speaker, local government is foundational to building a capable state that fosters economic growth and responds to societal needs.
Sadly, many of our municipalities face serious governance, planning and financial management challenges.
As things stand, 50 of the 257 municipalities in the country have active financial recovery plans. Three municipalities are under national intervention and these are Mangaung, Enoch Mgijima and Lekwa.
This situation is untenable, and the reality is that national government cannot intervene in all municipalities at the same time.
To resolve local government failures systematically, several initiatives are underway.
The Eskom municipal debt relief programme is among these interventions. Eskom Municipal Debt Relief Since February when we last reported on the relief programme, around 70 of the municipalities that had applied for debt relief have been approved.
Between March and August 2024, compliance with relief conditions by municipalities improved from 55% to 76%, aided by the National Treasury, Provincial Treasuries, and the Municipal Finance Improvement Programme.
Rand West City is the first municipality to benefit from a one-third debt write-off. This follows its substantial achievement of the debt-relief conditions for the first 12-month cycle.
More municipalities stand to benefit from this write-off of debt if they comply with the conditions of the programme.
We implore provincial and national departments owing municipalities to pay their dues. This will enable municipalities to pay waterboards and Eskom, so that utilities can deliver these services to citizens.
Metro Trading Reforms
Honourable Members, almost 60% of economic activity is concentrated in the eight metropolitan municipalities that are home to 6 out of 10 people in South Africa.
To turn things around in municipal service provision, the reforms in trading services focuses on financial, institutional and management changes in metros. The goal is to improve outcomes and enable them to generate surpluses to increase investment in infrastructure.
Our efforts are supportive of the intent of the White Paper on Local Government by the Department of Cooperative Governance to reimagine municipalities as transformative vehicles equipped to respond to the needs of residents.
Risk reduction
Climate-related disasters have intensified, damaging infrastructure and disrupting life. Countries in the Global South bear the largest brunt of these impacts.
The increasing frequency and intensity of climate disasters is costly, and we must proactively work to reduce their impact on the fiscus and on society.
One aspect of disaster financing is response and rehabilitation, after an event occurs. A slow response to these emergencies results in communities having to wait lengthy periods before they are finally assisted.
The recommendations of the disaster risk financing strategy will be implemented from 2025 to improve readiness and response time. The National Treasury is undertaking a detailed analysis of the experience of local governments regarding their access to emergency financing and their ability to disburse it.
This analysis will help us better understand their capacity to manage a multi-layered, disaster risk finance approach. It will look into the willingness of municipalities to independently manage their financial response to disasters, existing incentives to invest in readiness, and their ability to set aside sufficient funds for their response.
Procurement
Madam Speaker, public procurement accounts for about 19 per cent of consolidated government spending, totalling R1.5 trillion over the next three years.
The gazetting of the Public Procurement Act in July marked an important milestone. Though the Act has not come into effect, it sets the stage for better integration of public sector procurement. Preferential procurement and set asides will provide meaningful participation for those previously excluded and disadvantaged.
The Act also provides for industrialisation through designations, beneficiation, intensification of labour absorption, and other measures within local communities. This is important for factories and businesses.
The single national regulatory framework for procurement also promotes integrity, transparency and measures to prevent abuse in procurement, wasteful expenditure and corruption. The National Treasury is consulting widely in developing regulations that will enforce the provisions of the Act.
The regulations will be published in 2025, and these will pass through Parliamentary scrutiny prior to promulgation. As part of developing the regulations, the National Treasury will consider the findings and recommendations from the assessment of South Africa’s procurement system, using an international standard and universal tool.
The assessment was initiated last year and the report will be released publicly next month. In parallel, we are intensifying our efforts to modernise, digitise and make our procurement system transparent and in line with international standards.
FATF plan
Madam Speaker, we recently received a positive review from the Financial Action Task Force, FATF. The body found that we have now largely or fully addressed 16 of the 22 action items in its Action Plan.
This is a remarkable achievement, brought about by the unprecedented cooperation between state departments, as well as with civil society.
FATF lauded South Africa for improving how it dealt with issues of Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism. This leaves us with only six outstanding action items to be addressed for the last scheduled reporting cycle in February 2025.
Madam Speaker, the publication of the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement represents our commitment to an open and transparent budget process.
It is intended to empower all stakeholders to contribute to the discussion of the nation’s priorities. It makes transparent the budget framework through which Government seeks to achieve the nation’s social and economic development goals. I hope it is received in this spirit.
Madam Speaker, over the next three years we are embarking on a new journey. We will use our collective efforts to increase the pace and scale of tackling unemployment and building a stronger economy.
We will turn the fresh sense of hope, energy and fellowship, into action. We must use this opportunity to create an environment for strengthened service delivery, particularly to underserved communities in urban and rural areas.
We must seize the moment to build and invest for the future. Speaker, as I close, allow me to express my deepest gratitude to the President and Deputy President for their counsel, their support and for their leadership. Thank you also to the Deputy Ministers of Finance and the National Treasury team led by the Director-General.
They have walked this path with me, sharing freely their insight, expertise and passion for our country. Thank you to the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service and the Governor of the South African Reserve Bank, for their astute stewardship of these two key institutions.
Thank you to my Cabinet colleagues, the Ministers’ Committee on the Budget, and the Budget Council, who share the heavy load of the tough decisions that we must make to maintain the sustainability of our public finances.
To the Parliamentary Committees of Finance, Appropriations and Public Accounts,
I express my sincere appreciation. To my wife and family, your care, consideration and support is unending.
Thank you. Lastly, thank you to each and every South African.
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