EFF statement on 2021 budget speech
24 February 2021
The EFF notes the budget presented by Finance Minister Tito Mboweni devoid of South Africa's economic realities and continue to be premised on outdated economic policies. The reality is that Mboweni and the National Treasury have run out of ideas and failed to present a fiscal framework that is capable of reviving South Africa's struggling economy with the capacity to centre government's procurement budget as a driver for localization and industrialization.
The EFF is not surprised that the budget presented has retained the same division of revenue framework that has seen local government allocated less, despite being the most important sphere of government responsible for service delivery. In fact local government has collapsed in many places across the country; our people who do not have access to water, electricity, sanitation and other basic infrastructure will continue to suffer with more degeneration of service. For local government to receive only 9.7 per cent of the revenue raised nationally is the most indicative of the government's lack of interest in provision of sustainable basic services.
The EFF further notes with serious concern the continued onslaught on the poor, the working class and particularly students from poor and working-class families. Despite the claim by the Finance Minister that this is not an austerity budget, by all accounts and empirical evidence, it is an austerity budget. Since the advent of democracy, the Treasury has been hellbent on neoliberal ideas, practices and policies across all spheres of lives based on austerity fiscal framework.
The majority of allocation in the 2021/2022 financial year and over the medium-term continue to decline, and this includes the budget for social grants, education and agriculture through negative growth over the medium term and allocation reductions.