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S.Africa contingency reserves will not be invested in Eskom, Transnet, financing minister states

South Africa will use future drawdowns of its Gold and Foreign Exchange Contingency Reserve Account to curb its debt burden, Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana said, including he was contemplating tax hikes and expenditure cuts in the next postelection budget.

Africa's the majority of industrialised nation is facing an ailing economy and high financial obligation ahead of a general election on May 29 that might see the governing African National Congress party lose its parliamentary majority for the first time considering that the end of apartheid 30 years earlier.

Earlier this year, the federal government announced a change to the framework governing the so-called GFECRA account that catches gains and losses to foreign currency reserve deals, permitting a drawdown of 150 billion rand ($ 8 billion) over the next 3 years.

Eskom is out, or Transnet, Godongwana informed on the sidelines of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank meeting, ruling out financial support from the account for the country's ailing state-energy firms.

Debt service expenses now have actually emerged the greatest expense item - therefore that is a warning.

Other steps were likewise on the horizon a bit further out. The country's next 2025/2026 budget plan - set up for February next year - could also see more pronounced changes than the last one, the minister said.

If you want to do a fiscal consolidation you need to do it far far from the election, and the timing for us is the spending plan that we will table on the 19th February 2025, stated Godongwana, when inquired about the absence of substantial expense decreases in the current budget.

The next budget, nearly a year down the line, should send out a. signal and timeline by which fiscal consolidation would be. concluded, the minister added.

Now that is going to require perhaps well that we cut. expense and perhaps well that we fine-tune some taxes - it could. be a combination of both, he stated.

Another push the federal government would concentrate on in the months to. come was consolidating the wide variety of social costs measures. and grants, said Godongwana.

Potential customers for economic development, presently forecast at 1.6%. for 2024, could deal with headwinds if loadshedding were to intensify. or Middle East stress to intensify.

I factor in that there is a possibility of downside risks.

Nevertheless, the recent droughts that have wreaked havoc across. much of Sub-Saharan Africa, consisting of South Africa itself, would. have no influence on food inflation, at least in the meantime, he said.

(source: Reuters)