The Civil Engineering Contractor April 2019 | Page 3
COMMENT
Infrastructure Fund —
just smoke and mirrors
Eamonn Ryan - editor
[email protected]
T
here were groans of
disappointment among civil
engineering
contractors
on listening to finance minister Tito
Mboweni’s Budget Speech to Parliament
in February, with economists scouring
the budget numbers to locate the
promised stimulus spending on
infrastructure. Speaking at a post-Budget
breakfast hosted by AfriSam, economist
Dr Azar Jammine noted that spending
allocated to infrastructure had in fact
shrunk in real terms for 2018/19.
There is no infrastructure boom
or stimulus package in the current
budget. Capital investment is either
flat in most cases or reduced.
He said the figures “don’t add up” in
light of the large amounts supposedly
raised by President Ramaphosa as
part of his USD100-billion foreign
investment pledges. The Budget
noted that there had been −0.2%
Gross Fixed Capital Formation (yes,
negative) in 2018, rising minimally
to 1.5% in 2019 and 2.1% in 2020
(down from the previous estimate of
3.7% in last year’s Budget).
Where is the stimulus or the
USD100-billion? Where is the fiscal
www.civilsonline.co.za
consolidation, Jammine posed?
The rate of growth of government
spending, far from falling, is budgeted
to grow 9.7% compared to 7.9%
in the previous Budget. This looks
a lot like an election budget from
an ailing party rather than a fiscal
consolidation budget by a confident
government.
“If you think this budget is going to
create an infrastructure boom, you’re
wrong,” said Jammine, repeatedly
emphasising that the stimulus package
had so far been a lot of talk with no
figures to back it up. Ramaphosa
was cut a little slack when he
became president, in the hope that
the stimulus package would become
more concrete in time. Now was the
time for it to be revealed, but what
was revealed was smoke and mirrors.
Growth of hardware and materials
sales had been negative for two years,
with the latest figures the worst yet.
No sign of stimulus there.
Jammine noted that sources of
potential stimulus had been mooted
as either public sector investment
(the private sector has renewed its
investment strike, as Expropriation
Without Compensation has simply
replaced State Capture as a barrier
to trust between the public and
private sectors) or diverting
expenditure from the public sector
wage bill to capital investment.
Jammine pointed out that neither
had occurred in the Budget or
on the ground. Private sector
investment was down and the
government wage bill was up.
What was included in the Budget
comprised ‘accelerating’ R526-
billion of on-budget projects by
bringing in the private sector and
development finance institutions.
In several cases, the private sector
would design, build, and operate key
infrastructure assets. The government
was to commit R100-billion “over the
next decade”.
An additional promise in
September by Ramaphosa was a
R400-billion contribution from the
national fiscus to an Infrastructure
Fund, which would be reprioritised
in the existing three-year budget
cycle and spent on investment in
infrastructure. This would be used to
leverage additional resources from
development finance institutions,
multilateral development banks, and
private lenders and investors, the
president said back in September.
One possibility, noted Jammine,
was that extra capital could yet be
found in the fiscus from strengthening
controls. He attributed R40-billion
lost in 2018 due to the gutting of SARS
under the previous management — a
loss which would not be recurring
if remedial steps were taken at the
tax body; R26-billion had been lost
at municipal level through irregular
and unauthorised expenditure, which
would also not be recurring if systems
were tightened. Significant savings
could therefore be made by reducing
corruption and mismanagement.
Members of the audience questioned
whether government understood the
need for infrastructure development,
given a statistic quoted by Jammine
that construction accounted for
just 3% of GDP but 10% of its
workforce. This is a labour-intensive
industry that should be prioritised
by government over under-achieving
state-owned enterprises.
CEC April 2019 | 1