Comment by Peter Leon in respect of the IMF's decision to grant South Africa's request for relief under the Rapid Financing Instrument
28 July 2020
The South African economy was ailing before COVID-19's supply and demand shock. According to statistics released by StatsSA earlier today (here) the economy contracted in three out of four quarters last year. The shock caused by the pandemic (most notably the impact on global supply chains) has simply compounded this.
The decision by the International Monetary Fund to grant South Africa's request for emergency financing under the Rapid Financing Instrument (RFI) is a critical (and positive) turning point for the country's economy. The undertakings provided by the South African government in its letter of intent are particularly significant.
Most notably, the government has for the first time undertaken to introduce a limit in the form of a debt ceiling on the amount of debt that it is able to incur. Through the combination of the spending ceiling (which is currently in place) and the debt ceiling the government aims to reduce public debt, which it suggests will peak at 87.4 per cent of GDP in 2023/24.
The government finally appears to have committed itself to structural reform of both the product market and the labour market as indicated by the following undertaking which is consistent with the IMF's Article IV report earlier this year: