"The new Finance Minister is stuck with "Plan A" and delivered an austerity Mini-Budget"
For those of you concerned about the quality of public services such as education, health and social services your concerns will not have been addressed in the 2014 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement. Finance Minister Nhlahla Nene's first Mini-Budget does not cater to the concerns of the vast majority of South Africans.
There is no radical transformation of the economy for the second transition towards a more democratic and just South Africa. What Minister Nene has presented is a "Plan A" Mini Budget that the global rating agencies, conservative big business, investors and economist would like to see South Africa implementing over the next three years. What the Minister has presented can only be termed an austerity budget, .
The Minister's plan is delivered in such sanitised terms, speaking of the need for "fiscal consolidation" and "restraining expenditure growth" in order to "re-establish a sustainable foundation for the public finances and to build a platform for investment led growth in the future".
What does this mean for those who have been turned away from their clinic due to shortages in drug availability or for poor children's ability to access the basic for learning to take place like textbooks, desks and toilets? It means that they will be expected to endure for another two to three years drug shortages or unavailability of toilets or desks. While it may seem that the Minister is presenting a budget that is "safeguarding" the public purse and at the same time protecting front-line services this is in fact not the case.
For the first time since the financial meltdown in 2008, the curve in the diagrams showing government spending is pointing downwards. A Treasury spoke person's assurance that the austerity measures in Europe are worse will be of little consolation to the majority.