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South Africa reduces fuel taxes to offset Iran War Impact

South Africa said on Tuesday it would extend the fuel tax cut 'for two more months' to cushion the impact of the iran war on household budgets. However, the relief will end after this period and the country will recoup lost revenue through other means.

According to the?International Energy Agency, the U.S. and Israeli war on Iran has led to the largest oil supply disruptions in history. This has hurt countries like South Africa, which import most of their fuel, as global energy prices are rising.

The government announced a reduction of one month in the general fuel tax for April in late March. It has now extended this?relief? into May and early June.

In April the levy for petrol and diesel was lowered?by $3.1809 per litre. For May, it will be reduced by 3 rand for petrol, and 3.93 for diesel.

The finance and petroleum ministry announced in a statement that the relief would be halved to 1.50 rand per litre of petrol and to 1.96 rand per litre of diesel. They said the measure was intended to 'address concerns about higher inflation and the negative impact on economic growth.

The 'government' reiterated that the fuel tax reductions would not impact the fiscal framework of the 2026 budget, as the foregone tax amounting to 17.2 billion rand ($1.04billion) would be funded by a combination higher than expected revenue and underspending.

South Africa's Central Bank flagged fuel-driven risks of inflationary risk?at its meeting on monetary policy?in march and has said since that market implied interest rate expectations indicate scope for two 25-basis point hikes this year.

(source: Reuters)