Since February 19, a battle has raged over who pays taxes to Pretoria and for what, a technical and political fight about state finances that has never been so intense in post-apartheid history. The first victim was Finance Minister Enoch Godongwanaās desire to raise the Value Added Tax (VAT) on all consumers by 2%, to 17%. On March 12, he compromised with critics, imposing a 1% hike, spread over two years. The alleged need for budget cuts is also harped on endlessly by neoliberals, though Godongwana is facing constraints imposing the degree of austerity he would like to, leading to some speculation there is a potential policy shift.
Leftwing forces remain furious, because instead of VAT hikes, they demanded the restoration of a corporate tax rate which has nearly halved (to 27%) since 1992 ā because that generosity starting in Nelson Mandelaās African National Congress (ANC) presidency resulted in lower rates private investment than during the 1965-90 period ā and imposition of a wealth tax that would mainly hit beneficiaries of the countryās pre-1994 official white racism, in what remains the worldās most unequal society. The richest 10% of South Africans own 85% of the countryās wealth.
But even the ANCās main governing partner since last June ā the centre-right, pro-corporate Democratic Alliance, which achieved 22% of the vote last May as against the ANCās 40% –
For that battle we must thank an exceptionally powerful ā and no longer quite so shadowy ā organisation from Washington reputed the world over for yanking the chains of finance ministers and central bankers: the International Monetary Fund. Indeed the term āIMF Riotā is used, as former World Bank chief economist Joe Stiglitz explained, when the institutionās economists āsqueeze the last pint of blood out of [debtors]. They turn up the heat until, finally, the whole cauldron blows up.ā
South Africa is not yet at that point. Still, protests against the budget occurred first on February 19, and then when Godongwana backed down and was told not to try pushing up the Value Added Tax by 2% as he had planned that day.
The IMFās demand for āfiscal consolidationā was referred to 17 times in documentation for the unnecessary mid-2020 Covid-19 loan of $4.3 billion, and 37 times in its most recent marching orders to Godongwana just six weeks ago. The IMF itself admits the two words fiscal consolidation are āa euphemism for government action to reduce fiscal deficits and hence public debt,ā which can be done via spending cuts or tax increases or both.
With the Democratic Alliance now cosplaying as a faux-populist critic of Value Added Tax hikes, and with civil society forces repeatedly protesting Treasuryās austerity mentality, the left pincer is trying to save the state from its scheduled double-digit (2020-26) cuts in per person budgeting.
Godongwanaās rebuttal is that this year he intends raising new finance, not chopping programmes: āWe have been [giving] budget cuts for a number of years and theyāve not achieved the desired outcome⦠The problem is that thereās this notion that you can have endless cuts, which are self-defeating, and you end up reducing the very thing you want to utilise ā government investment in infrastructure.ā
Regardless of Godongwanaās spin-doctoring, some such funding is still being whittled back, such as his 58% ārealā (after-inflation) infrastructure cuts for our 26 public universities (disclosure: I teach at one, and like nearly all others, our facilities are extremely stressed, with acute accommodation shortages suffered by working-class students all over the country).
Godongwanaās entire 2025 post-school budget is up less than 1% from 2024, but then we must factor in the 4.4% inflation rate and 1.33% population growth (and an even higher eligibility level for tertiary students, given much higher matric pass rates last year), causing a real 6.7% per-student cut. Godongwana also maintained the stateās bursary means-test (eligibility level) ceiling at R350 000/year for parental income; but it should now be R462 000 to have kept up with 2018-24 inflation.
In contrast to student #FeesMustFall activists demanding universal access, the IMF advocates a redirection of spending (ābetter targetingā) away from āthe growing allocation of resources to tertiary education subsidies, which largely benefit better-off students and crowd out crucial spending on basic education.ā
No, the bursary means test representing most new funding since 2018 already limits recipients to working-class and poor children, but regardless, this is a classic divide-and-conquer technique: replacing what should be a āboth/andā with an āeither/or.ā And in reality, instead of a āgrowing allocation,ā Godongwanaās Treasury has radically shrunk the bursaries, leaving tens of thousands of students hungry and angry.
Even more destructive and no doubt deadly is Godongwanaās 3.5% cut in real spending on district-level HIV/AIDS and TB, down to R25 billion, at a time USAIDās shock PEPFAR cuts last month suddenly left this vital sector R8 billion short of funds. (In contrast, Godongwana allocated R5 billion over three years to the SA National Defense Forceās collapsed eastern-DRC mission, at a time the hapless army lads ā especially the majority now stranded at the Goma airport ā were named the #1 sexual abusers among United Nations āpeace-keepers.ā Nevertheless, jingoistic macho militarists successfully lobbied Godongwana for a 39% real funding increase on Octoberās budget.
Enter the IMFās āiron lady,ā stage right
The budgetās brutal chops, worsened by radical contraction in overseas aid from the U.S. State Department as well as British and European agencies, are amplified by another Washington institution that desperately needs reform. The IMFās current South Africa āmission chiefā Africa is Washington-based Delia Velculescu, who hails from Transylvania (home of the vampire Vlad Dracula). According to the Guardian, āthe Romanian economist chosen to lead the IMFās negotiating team in Greece, was dubbed the āiron ladyā during the fraught talks over Cyprusās bailout.ā
Then, as Greece was going through economic hell in the mid-2010s, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange published a confidential phone call transcript between her and another IMF official, revealing the importance of a ācredit eventā precipitating a Greek fiscal crisis to achieve the desired change. Asked Velculescuās boss, āWhat is going to bring it all to a decision point? In the past there has been only one time when the decision has been made and then that was when they were about to run out of money seriously and to default.ā She replied, āI agree that we need an event, but I donāt know what that will be.ā
In response, former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis recalled how he quit in 2015 once the IMF and European Union squeezed his president Alexis Tsipras to reject a successful national referendum against IMF/EU austerity. Departing with that surrender were his alternative āpolicy proposals to end austerity, target the oligarchy, and reform public administration (rather than attacking, again, the weak)⦠allowing Greece to recover without further social decline.ā
Instead, Varoufakis testified, the IMF and specifically Velculescu continually demanded ācrushing new austerity which is inhuman and unnecessary but which, today, the Tsipras government (according to Velculescu) seems ready to accept, having already surrendered once in July 2015. The IMFās austerity package is inhuman because it will destroy hundreds of thousands of small businesses, defund societyās weakest, and turbocharge the humanitarian crisis⦠For decades, whenever the IMF āvisitedā a struggling country, it promoted āreformsā that led to the demolition of small businesses and the proletarisation of middle-class professionals.ā
During her repeated visits to South Africa last year, Velculescu helped to craft various IMF documents (published on July 31, September 4, November 28, January 27 and January 30) insisting ā more than 100 times, and typically graced with the adjectives āambitiousā, ānecessaryā, āwell-definedā, ālargerā ā that Godongwana impose fiscal consolidation.
(Again, an academic disclosure: like Velculescu, I also did my PhD at Johns Hopkins University, though mine was in economic geography because of the extreme neoliberal dogma featured in the schoolās economics department. Iād attended Hopkins right after the Wharton School of Finance ā spending two years in Philadelphia halfway between Donald Trumpās and Elon Muskās āeducationā there ā and the full extent of the market-friendly, thoroughly-fraudulent, financial engineering taught at such prestigious U.S. universities is now on display.)
Blame Washingtonās spin, not just Pretoriaās
But after the dramatic rejection of Godongwanaās February 19 budget from both the left and centre-right, Velculescuās latest co-authored article ā two days before his latest budget ā turned devious: āBuilding broad social support for reform efforts is essential to achieve their full benefits. Recent IMF analysis highlights that communication and engagement, along with policies to support vulnerable groups, are vital to increase acceptance of reforms. For example, providing information about the cost of electricity in South Africa, which is 68% higher than in the US, was found to boost support for electricity reforms by 9 percentage points.ā
Utility privatisation is one of the IMFās predictable āreforms,ā no matter its repeated, ongoing failures here. Treasuryās fiscal stress and that 68% electricity price premium, for example, stem directly from Eskomās massive $3.75 billion (R70 billion) debt due to the World Bank for its 2010 contribution to the Medupi-Kusile skorokoro coal-fired power-plant corruption of the ruling party by Hitachi. The Bankās largest-ever loan should be canceled as Odious Debt ā but such logical remedies are outside the definition of fiscal consolidation, as are higher corporate taxes and a wealth tax, never to be contemplated in Washington circa 2025.
Velculescuās other reforms include āhalving (sic) South Africaās business regulation, governance, and labour-market gaps relative to peers,ā a rate akin to Elon Muskās infamous chainsaw now buzzing through the U.S. government.
In another attempt to ābuild broad social supportā for fiscal consolidation, IMF resident representative Tidiane Kinda spoke to critics on Tuesday. He conceded that āausterity needs to be very carefully designed,ā but once again specifically attacked the alleged āgrowing allocation of subsidies to tertiary education,ā even though the kids qualify because their parents are poor and working-class.Ā
The IMFās most catastrophic recent such attacks on the next generation via fiscal consolidation occurred in Kenya last June. The GenZ kids fought back, and as the Bretton Woods Observer explained, āWhile accusing the government of making reckless financial decisions, protestors also turned the spotlight on the IMF and World Bank for their role in Kenya’s escalating debt and social crises.ā Back in Washington, a degree of humility was observed in the Bretton Woods Institutionsā office cubicles, as Nairobiās Standard reported: āGen Z protests now spark global rethink on IMF conditions.ā
Somehow though, Velculescu and Kinda didnāt get the memo. The iron fist and ham-handedness that accompanied the IMFās bailouts of the apartheid regime right after the 1960 Sharpeville Massacre, the 1976 Soweto uprising and the early-1980s urban rebellions and gold price crash are now making a comeback in Pretoria, cowing Godongwana and his Treasury team, no matter his stated desire to avoid the dreaded word āausterity,ā from which logically follow two more: āIMF Riot.ā
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