The government’s Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) was presented by Finance Minister Tito Mboweni on Wednesday 28 October 2020 – and it wasn’t pretty!
People, South Africa is in trouble! The country is currently borrowing at a rate of R2.1 billion a day. Dit gaan woes!
Some might think that the MTBPS isn’t important to the ordinary man in the street – they couldn’t be more wrong
The MTBPS is basically government’s plan for the financial future of the country – and our future does not look bright.
Here are some key take-outs from the budget:
THE GOOD
Please excuse me if I don’t jump up and down on these promises made. I will rather wait to see them correctly implemented and filtering down to my community.
THE BAD
THE UGLY
Government once again “bailed out” SAA with R10.5bn, what does this mean for SA and where did the money come from if we don’t have money?
The SAA R10.5bn will mainly come through reductions of the baselines of national departments and their public entities, and provincial and local government conditional grants.
This essentially means that the already struggling public are having important services like police (R1.2bn) higher education (R1.1bn) and health (R695m) massively affected – to fund SAA.
So at the end of the day, it is once again ordinary South Africans who will suffer a lack of services because of ailing state owned enterprises.
And finally… THE BIZARRE
Where government says the R500bn Covid relief went:
In April this year, government announced a major fiscal relief package of around R500bn or 10% of GDP. This is how Minister Tito Mboweni said it was spent:
As a tax-paying South African citizen, I definitely would have loved more detail and proof of the above – as I specifically remember huge fraud involved with tenders around this money, and even dead people getting money from the TERS fund!
So what does this mean for ordinary South Africans?
Everything points to the fact that it will take us the best part of five years to get back to the 2019 levels of economic activity – and that should scare us into getting our finances into order.
We need to:
South Africa is in trouble. The struggle is real. We need to get our personal finances in order.
*Moeshfieka Botha is Head of Research and Consumer Education at National Debt Advisors. For more information on debt and personal finance go to www.nationaldebtadvisors.co.za