How South Africa stumbled into a fiscal trap

Loading player...
GUEST – Roy Havemann is Principal: Financial Sector Policy and Public Economics at Krutham (previously Intellidex).


Over the past decade, the interest rate that South Africa pays on its debt has consistently been above the economic growth rate. Mathematically, this means that debt grows as a percentage
of GDP. It becomes a “vicious circle”. Higher debt makes investors and ratings agencies nervous, meaning the interest rate they are prepared to pay for our debt rises. This increases borrowing costs and hurts investment spending, making fiscal consolidation
(and counter-cyclical fiscal policy) more and more difficult, making the fiscal position worse and raising the sovereign risk premium.

The interest rate rises again and the cycle continues. The National Treasury is keenly aware of this — and of the trade-off between services and fiscal consolidation. The Budget Review
put it plainly: “The 2024 Budget balances development and sustainable public finances. In the context of persistently low economic growth, the government will protect critical services, support economic growth through reforms and public investment, and stabilise
public debt… Rapid growth in debt-service costs chokes the economy and the public finances. The government is staying the course to narrow the budget deficit and stabilise debt. This year, for the first time since 2008/09, the government will achieve a primary
budget surplus. Debt will stabilise in 2025/26.”
6 Mar 2024 3PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

BofA Slashes SA Growth Forecast as Inflation Surges

Bank of America has cut South Africa’s 2026 GDP growth forecast to 1.3%, warning that higher oil and fertilizer prices will keep inflation above 4% for most of the year. Economist Tatonga Rusike explains
23 Apr 3PM 11 min

Understanding SA’s First Wealth Score

Franc unveils South Africa’s first-ever Wealth Score, revealing that financial habits—not income—are the strongest predictor of financial health. We unpack why SA’s national score is 45/100 and the behavior gap between knowing and doing with Dr. Thomas Brennan, founder and CEO of Franc.
23 Apr 3PM 13 min

Clicks Lifts HEPS 8% Despite Warehouse Disruptions.

Clicks delivered firm interim results with diluted HEPS up 8.1%, even as warehouse system delays cost an estimated R175 million in lost sales. CEO Bertina Engelbrecht discusses pharmacy growth, trading margins, and festive‑season competition.
23 Apr 2PM 16 min