
G20: Fiscal and monetary policy heads to host latest finance track meetings in KZN
The meetings will kick off on Monday, starting with the deputy finance ministers and deputy central bank governors.
This is the fourth time the group will meet with global counterparts since South Africa assumed the rotational presidency.
At previous meetings, finance officials from South Africa and other parts of the world emphasised challenges and constraints to growth in developing countries, particularly in Africa.
Debt sustainability for developing economies is one of the priorities, with calls from the continent for solutions to address the crippling debt crisis, which is possibly the worst in 80 years.
The high cost of cross-border payments is also expected to be back on the agenda at this week's meeting.
'It has to do with cost, it has to do with speed, it has to do with transparency. It's a very important area of work, particularly when the presidency of the G20 is held by an African country like South Africa, because the cost of cross-border payments in African corridors is among the highest in the world. It is said that the most expensive corridor is the Johannesburg-Harare corridor,' said Reserve Bank governor and co-host of the G20 finance track Lesetja Kganyago.
The series of meetings in Durban comes on the back of continued geopolitical tensions and looming threats of new trade wars.
South Africa is the only country in sub-Saharan Africa to be singled out in the latest round of announcements by United States (US) President Donald Trump, with the possibility of a 30% tax on exports to the US from August.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


eNCA
an hour ago
- eNCA
Manufacturing sector braces for Trump's tariffs
JOHANNEBSURG - The South African manufacturing sector is bracing for impact, as US President Donald Trump's looming tariffs threaten to deliver a significant blow. Despite recent output increases, the sector is already under strain. Logistics nightmares, soaring input costs, and escalating electricity prices are further squeezing manufacturers. The CSIR is hosting a Manufacturing Indaba in Johannesburg with many of these issues set to be addressed.

The Herald
2 hours ago
- The Herald
Bessent no-show, Brics tensions set to cast shadow over Durban G20 meeting
'Policy uncertainty is the biggest theme now,' South African Reserve Bank deputy governor Fundi Tshazibana told Reuters. The G20 has its origins in past crisis firefighting and took off as countries around the world saw a need to co-ordinate policies to emerge from the global financial crisis of the late 2000s. 'The G20 was built around a presumption that all the world's major economies shared a common interest in a stable, relatively open global economy,' said Brad Setser of the Council on Foreign Relations. 'But Trump doesn't care about stability and wants a more closed global economy.' The Durban gathering of finance chiefs on Thursday and Friday also unfolds against a backdrop of mounting economic pressures, particularly for African economies. Sub-Saharan Africa's external debt has ballooned to $800bn (R14.24-trillion), or 45% of GDP, according to Goldman Sachs, while traditional funding sources are drying up. Chinese lending has slowed to a trickle after years of expansion, leaving an $80bn (R1.42-trillion) financing gap. 'The views they've expressed are if you negotiate them down before taking the loan, they will go with that,' said Trevor Manuel, former finance minister of South Africa who is leading the Africa Expert Panel of the G20. 'But once the loan is made, they expect a return and that is embedded in their legislation. So that is one issue that needs a lot of attention.' China's Belt and Road Initiative has brought significant resources to the African continent, 'but there are also the offsets', said Manuel. 'I think that part of the push in future is greater transparency, which means some of the barter arrangements and so on need to be dealt with differently.'

TimesLIVE
2 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
US court upholds protected status for Cameroonians and Afghans — for now
A US appeals court has blocked for now a bid by President Donald Trump's administration to strip temporary protected status from thousands of Afghans in the US, court documents showed, allowing them more time to argue the case. Monday's order by the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit granted an administrative stay on the termination until July 21, following a request from immigration advocacy organisation CASA. The group's lawsuit against the US department of homeland security (DHS) challenged the termination of temporary protected status (TPS) for Afghans and Cameroonians unveiled by the administration in April. The DHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment. At the time of the April announcement, it had said conditions in Afghanistan and Cameroon no longer merited the protected status. The TPS programme provides protection against deportation and provides work permits for periods of six to 18 months to those from countries stricken by natural disaster, armed conflict or other extraordinary event.