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Ramaphosa gives taste of plan to kickstart economy

President Cyril Ramaphosa shared parts of a package of reforms to kickstart an economy that’s in recession with business and labour leaders last week.

The measures, already adopted by the Cabinet, will “secure confidence in sectors affected by regulatory uncertainty” and cover mining, telecommunications, tourism and transport, the presidency said in a emailed statement Sunday. It will “reprioritise government spending, within the existing fiscal framework, toward activities that will stimulate economic activity,” it said.

Ramaphosa revealed highlights of the plan at a September 14 meeting attended by leaders of business formations, chief executives and the heads of the nation’s major labour federations. The full package should be announced at the October 24 midterm budget, Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene said earlier this month, adding it will include a long-awaited announcement on the allocation of spectrum to mobile-network operators.

The economy has shrunk for two straight quarters and business confidence has slipped to levels last seen when Jacob Zuma was president. Ratings company Moody’s Investors Service more than halved its economic growth projection for the year after the news, saying it adds to the nation’s fiscal challenges. Optimism faded as economic reforms weren’t implemented quickly enough and global trade wars and turmoil in other emerging markets soured sentiment.

Meeting proposals

The Treasury’s 1.5% growth forecast for the year in its February budget is already below the 3% that Ramaphosa pledged to target in the run-up to the African National Congress’s leadership election in 2017.

The ANC’s decision to back changes to the constitution to make it easier to seize land without compensation to help redress skewed ownership patterns has raised concern about a potential erosion of property rights. Policy uncertainty will linger until land-reform laws are formulated and this won’t happen until after next year’s election, damping investor sentiment and creating a credit-negative environment, Moody’s Vice President Lucie Villa said September 13.

South Africa would need about R48bn for the package, the Mail & Guardian reported last month, citing Nene.

People attending the September 14 meeting discussed proposals to start an infrastructure development initiative that draws in “private-sector funding and delivery expertise, the presidency said. Ramaphosa welcomed the offer extended by business for the secondment of private-sector professionals to the government to improve implementation, it said.

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