Watching Trevor Manuel deliver his budget speech was in many respects as useful as its contents. In two off the cuff remarks, one to Zwelinzima Vavi in the public gallery to say less about tax policy, and one to MPs not to look away when he berated them for wasteful spending and careless oversight, the finance minister made it clear that he was losing patience with ill disciplined and ill informed politicians. He warned MPs that how money was spent, not the money itself, would bring about improved living conditions in South Africa. With South Africa now facing a budget deficit of 3.8% the next government faces a fiscal environment very different to that of its predecessor. Growth, as much as redistribution, will have to be prioritised to prevent South Africa from slipping into a debt trap.
Trevor Manuel has set a tough agenda for the next government. They will no longer have the luxury of choosing between growth and redistribution.
The economic policy dilemma facing the next government will be striking a balance between redistribution and growth. The commodity boom that coincided with much of the Mbeki presidency allowed the government to prioritse redistribution in the knowledge that a modest growth rate was almost assured - regardless of domestic economic policy. Trevor Manuel's budget speech made it very clear that that was no longer the case. Certainly the next government will not be insulated against weak domestic economic policy by extraneous factors such as high commodity prices. Tax revenue, employment, and economic growth will for the first time in several years be a more direct reflection of the success of domestic economic policy.
Declining export earnings, a weak mining and manufacturing sector, and weaker consumer spending will translate into lower growth and thereby lower government revenue from taxation. The result is that current revenue estimates are lower than previously forecast. With an economic growth forecast for 2009 of 1.2% the government now faces an estimated budget deficit of 3.8%. That deficit must in turn be funded through borrowing which will have to be repaid with interest in future budgets.
While the new government therefore inherits a fundamentally different fiscal environment to that of its predecessor it also inherits the social welfare and infrastructure spending commitments of its predecessor. It is here where the implications of the growth versus redistribution debate become relevant.
Social grants spending today reaches a quarter of all South Africans. In a quarter of households handouts from the state are now the single biggest source of income. At the same time the contribution of these grants to declining levels of poverty has been well established. But they do not offer a way out of poverty or an impetus for growth. Borrowing to fund welfare spending therefore risks placing South Africa into a dangerous downward debt spiral in which state borrowing does not realize a return to fund incurred debt. The dangers of debt were a recurring theme in the minister's speech and sounded a great deal like a warning to those in Cosatu and the South African Communist Party that large budget deficits were not in the interests of the country.