NATIONAL ASSEMBLY DEBATE ON THE FISCAL POLICY FRAMEWORK, DR MARIO GR ORIANI-AMBROSINI MP, INKATHA FREEDOM PARTY, March 2 2010
Minister Pravin Gordhan is an extraordinary man. I came to know him during the negotiation process. He has a strong personality which would almost be intimidating and threatening, were it not for his intensely benign and reassuring attitude and the sense of confidence which emanates from his leadership. This may account for the fact that he has charmed so many into applauding his fiscal policy framework.
Minister Gordhan will borrow in the next three years not only as much debt as was accumulated during the last days of colonialism, the apartheid period and the new democratic South Africa - inclusive of money used for the greatly increased social spending of the past 16 years - but about one and a half times more than that. The present national debt of R513 billion will be raised to R1.3 trillion by 2013, and that is not the end of it.
According to his projections, the debt will only stabilize by 2015, by which time, if growing at the same rate, the debt will be R1.7 trillion. He clarified in committee that in 2015 we will have a stabilized budget, by which he means a budget with a deficit of only 4% of GDP which, by projecting the growth of the size of the budget and the GDP, means that after 2015 the deficit will grow by a few more hundred billion Rand per year. In this context, in 2015 every child will be born with a debt at birth of about R340 000 at present Rand value, steadily growing thereafter. The principle of no taxation without representation does not apply in respect of such newborns who will have to pay off money they had no part in borrowing.
With his charm, Minister Gordhan tells us not to worry because he has got it all figured out. He tells us that the economy will grow this year by 2.3%, next year by 3.2%, and the following one by 3.6%, and thereafter it will all be hunky dory. He is relying on the same advice of those who in the past 15 years have got growth projection wrong, starting from the 6% projected growth in GEAR, which turned out to be a mere 3%, to finish with the grand prediction that the recession would bypass South Africa.
The Reserve Bank appeared before our Standing Committee and frankly told us that the Minister's growth projections are inflated and they themselves work on something more realistic; around a flat 2% growth for the foreseeable future.