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Budget must focus on jobs - ANC

Budget must focus on jobs - ANC

The ANC says it cannot be “business as usual” when it comes to SA’s triple challenge of unemployment, poverty and inequality.

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Johannesburg - South Africa’s governing party will press the government to prioritise creating jobs and alleviating poverty in the national budget, said Gwede Mantashe, the African National Congress’s secretary-general.

Read also: ANC wants budget 're-prioritised'

“It can’t be business as usual,” Mantashe told reporters in Pretoria on Sunday after a national executive committee meeting to discuss the ANC’s weaker performance in municipal elections this month. “To effectively deal with the triple challenge of unemployment, poverty and inequality, government in the coming cabinet lekgotla must re-prioritise the budget” to ensure National Development Plan programmes are funded, he said.

The ANC is seeking ways to reverse a decline in support after this months recording its worst performance in an election since Nelson Mandela led the party to power to end apartheid in 1994. It won 54.5 percent of the popular vote in the August 3 municipal ballot, down from 62.2 percent in a national election two years ago, and it gave up outright majorities in four of the country’s eight major cities. The NDP is the government’s 20-year plan to boost economic growth and slash a 27 percent unemployment rate.

The party’s leadership agreed to take collective responsibility for the drop in support and “resolved to take immediate and bold actions to address the weaknesses and shortcomings that led to the decline of our electoral support”, Mantashe said.

‘Populist posture’

The NDP was released in 2012 as the government’s proposals to accelerate economic growth, create jobs and attract investment. The central bank projects no growth this year. President Jacob Zuma’s cabinet will hold a four-day meeting, known as a lekgotla, this week to discuss the economy and other national issues.

“For a long time we have been talking about the lax attitude toward the implementation of the NDP, but now there are consequences where they’ve lost municipalities, now they want to talk to Treasury to finance the NDP,” Ralph Mathekga, a political analyst at the Johannesburg-based Mapungubwe Institute for Strategic Reflection, said by phone. “That is why this budget rhetoric is coming out and with a very populist posture.”

Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan has pledged to keep spending under control, cutting South Africa’s budget deficit to 2.4 percent of gross domestic product in three years from about 4 percent and to limit debt to less than 50 percent of GDP.

Coalition talks

Fitch Ratings warned that the results of this month’s vote could push the ANC to turn to more populist policies to redress voter dissatisfaction. Fitch and S&P Global Ratings, which both have South Africa’s credit rating at one level above junk status, have cited the nation’s increasing debt as a risk to the ratings.

Coalition talks to control cities including Pretoria and Johannesburg are continuing among parties including the opposition Democratic Alliance and the Economic Freedom Fighters. They have until August 20 to form governments in a total of 27 hung councils across the country.

The ANC controls three of the eight main cities outright and won the most votes in Johannesburg, the biggest city, and industrial hub neighbour, Ekurhuleni, while falling below 50 percent support. The DA is the largest party in Pretoria and Nelson Mandela Bay and has an outright majority in Cape Town.

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