Workers have a lot riding on the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) to be tabled at Parliament on 1 November
29 October 2023
Workers and the entire country have a lot riding on the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) to be tabled by Finance Minister, Enoch Godongwana, at Parliament on 1 November. Our nation is facing a myriad of very difficult challenges, ranging from tepid economic growth, a 42.1% unemployment rate, a youth unemployment rate of 60%, endemic crime and corruption, a painful period of loadshedding, cable theft crippling our passenger and freight railway network, dysfunctional municipalities, and ingrained poverty and inequality. All of these feed into a sense of despair.
The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) has been dismayed by National Treasury’s decades long addiction to a variety of economic and fiscal policies that have not succeeded by any yard stick. We should not be surprised when these policies continue to fail to yield results.
In 2020, Treasury imposed an ill-conceived wage freeze on public servants. Subsequently below inflation increases have been effected for public servants. Yet the fiscus and the economy remain in a crisis precisely because the real obstacles to growing the economy have not been addressed, e.g. ensuring affordable electricity, reliable rail and efficient ports. We have been astounded by reckless attempts to impose misguided austerity budget cuts across government in the run up to the MTBPS, including freezing vacancies and infrastructure investment programmes.
Whilst we appreciate the fiscal constraints facing the state and the need to cut fat and reprioritise expenditure, the solutions offered by Treasury of bluntly slashing expenditure and further decapacitating the state in an economy in desperate need of stimulus and well-oiled and capacitated public services, will only choke the economy and further weaken an already enfeebled government and undermine its ability to provide quality public and municipal services. What is needed is to grow the economy. That is the only sober and sustainable path to pay down our worrying debt trajectory.