Institute of Race Relations (IRR) launches #protectpensions campaign
Data from the IRR shows that the South African government is running out of money. The ratio of government debt to gross domestic product (GDP) is now higher than it has been at any time in the history of South Africa.
At the same time, the debt of state-owned enterprises is high and continues to rise, with no end in sight. Without reform within the government, our debt levels will continue to rise. But given the current ideological bent of the government and the African National Congress (ANC), reform sufficient to change our economic fortunes is an unlikely prospect.
Raising taxes is also an unlikely prospect, as taxpayers are already being squeezed for much of their income, and there is not much room left to extract more.
Short of going to the International Monetary Fund (which is also politically unpalatable), there is only one other option – the pensions of ordinary hard-working South Africans.
Don’t take our word for it – the 2019 ANC election manifesto says that prescribed assets (where pension funds and other investors are mandated to invest in certain sectors or companies) will be investigated as a source of funding for economic and social development. This could mean using the pensions of ordinary South Africans to fund Eskom, for example.