SACPblackStar.jpg

 

SACP Statement, 26 February 2015

 

 

The 2015 Budget Speech

 

 

The South African Communist Party welcomes the tabling of the 2015 Budget
Speech by the Honourable Minister of Finance Mr Nhlanhla Nene yesterday, 25
February 2015 in Parliament, Cape Town. The SACP congratulates Minister Nene
and particularly welcomes the new section on providing support to public
enterprises to drive our second, more radical phase of democratic
transformation.

 

The SACP further welcomes the government's firm commitment on the New
Development Bank created by the BRICS countries, Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa, with the first regional office of the Bank to be
located in South Africa. The BRICS Bank must be developed to become an
alternative to the imperialist, Washington-based International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank. The two Breton Woods institutions have for decades
ravaged the lives of millions of workers and poor people across the world,
more especially in the global South. This has been done by imposing
neoliberal policies and practices and creating conditions that caused one
crisis after another, including the crisis of 2007-2008 from which the world
is yet to recover. 

 

The budget was presented eight years since the eruption of this biggest
system crisis since the "Great Depression" of the 1930s. As the Minister
said, "growth is expected to remain sluggish", characterised by
"considerable variations in performance between countries" and "economic
trends that are likely to be volatile". In this context, weak domestic
economic performance coupled with high levels of public debt has serious
implications. This is reflected in the budget, whose expansionary element is
unfortunately restricted. However, the SACP welcomes increased allocations,
in so far as those were the best possible under the objective circumstances,
and we do this with a view of engaging further as the budget process
unfolds.

 

In the prevailing international context, a decline in demand for South
Africa's exports, especially minerals, will impact negatively on our
economy. South Africa remains significantly dependent on minerals, which are
used as inputs in the production of finished goods in export destinations.
We come across those products in the market, as imports, but this time at a
greater cost. This colonially-rooted path of dependency and a weak domestic
productive base are not sustainable. This is why we need to shift our
democratic transformation to a second, more radical phase. This must
involve, as we say in our discussion document titled 'Going to the root',
fundamental economic and social transformation, and must help expand state
revenue generation to meet transformation and development imperatives.

 

While noting the negative impact of the global slowdown on "our major
commodity exports", on the positive side the budget envisages that "South
Africa will benefit from the lower oil prices". However, the Minister
stopped short of recognising that consumer goods including food prices
remain high, despite declining oil prices. In addition, the reported decline
in inflation, which "peaked at 6.6 per cent in June last year" to "4.4 per
cent last month" does not mean that prices were reduced. It just means that,
with the exception of the (administered) petrol price which has decreased,
most prices increased - but at a somewhat slower rate.

 

The private sector, which dominates our economy, has mostly increased
consumer goods prices when oil and fuel prices increased, citing this as a
structural factor in the cost of production and transportation. Now, despite
successive oil and fuel price declines, those increased prices were not
reduced. Instead most prices continue to rise as reflected in Statistics
South Africa's inflation monitor. The SACP reiterates its call for an
investigation into, and a reduction in the prices of consumer goods. The
Party will adopt action in this regard if the private sector remains
intransigent.

 

The SACP notes the main tax proposals which raise personal income tax by one
percentage point and adjust tax brackets. The SACP is concerned that, the
rich were given tax relief. This is reflected in corporate tax almost
completely untouched and in what is referred to as "a more generous tax
regime" for business. The Minister should have actually taxed the rich even
more to boost revenue and support our development priorities. This is what
the SACP is calling for.

 

The SACP notes the assertion that the financial services sector needs to do
more to treat customers fairly. The financial sector is responsible for
unsustainable household indebtedness resulting in part, as the Minister
acknowledges, "from poor market conduct by lenders and financial advisors".
The SACP however does not believe that engagements between the Treasury and
"major banks" alone is the solution to the crisis of household
over-indebtedness.  The SACP has called for, and therefore reiterates its
call for the convening of a second financial sector summit.  Under the
auspices of the National Economic Development and Labour Council, the summit
should deal with the crisis of household indebtedness and the transformation
of the financial sector's architecture as this is the primary cause of many
problems affecting our people and our economy.

 

The SACP further notes that a "Bill establishing two new regulatory
authorities, the so-called 'twin peaks' reform, will be tabled this year".
This is part of strengthening regulations for banks, insurers, derivatives
and hedge funds as well as the supervision of large financial groups and
collective investment schemes, particularly money market funds. While
supporting the need for strengthening regulations, the SACP believes that
the so-called "twin peaks" model is itself a problem and not a solution in
its current form. The model has the effect of curtailing the independence of
important regulatory establishments such as the National Credit Regulator
and subjecting them to the Financial Services Board which is itself an
outstanding problem to attend to.

 

 

Issued by the SACP

 

Contact:

Alex Mashilo - Spokesperson

Mobile: 082 9200 308

Office: 011 339 3621/2

Twitter: SACP1921

Facebook Page: South African Communist Party

Website: www.sacp.org.za

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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