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R382 million UIF lifeline confirmed by Labour Minister for SAPO employees
R382 million UIF lifeline confirmed by Labour Minister for SAPO employees

IOL News

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

R382 million UIF lifeline confirmed by Labour Minister for SAPO employees

Minister of Employment and Labour, Nomakhosazana Meth says nearly 6,000 SAPO workers will receive relief through a R382 million TERS intervention, as government backs a plan to stabilise the troubled state-owned entity. The Minister of Employment and Labour, Nomakhosazana Meth, has confirmed the implementation of a new agreement between the South African Post Office (SAPO) and the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF), aimed at preserving nearly 6,000 jobs and supporting the recovery of one of South Africa's most critical state-owned entities. Through the Temporary Employer-Employee Relief Scheme (TERS), the UIF will inject over R382 million into SAPO over six months. The funds will provide immediate financial relief to 5,956 employees while enabling SAPO to implement a long-term turnaround strategy. 'This is a bold and necessary step to protect workers and restore confidence in our public institutions,' said Meth. 'The TERS programme is not just a financial mechanism — it is a strategic tool to stabilise employment, support economic recovery and ensure that no worker is left behind.' Funds will be disbursed in monthly tranches through a dedicated TERS bank account. Meth emphasised that this will happen 'with strict governance, auditing and compliance measures in place.'

'No worker left behind': Labour minister confirms R382 million UIF lifeline to save nearly 6,000 SAPO jobs
'No worker left behind': Labour minister confirms R382 million UIF lifeline to save nearly 6,000 SAPO jobs

IOL News

time19-05-2025

  • Business
  • IOL News

'No worker left behind': Labour minister confirms R382 million UIF lifeline to save nearly 6,000 SAPO jobs

Minister of Employment and Labour, Nomakhosazana Meth says nearly 6,000 SAPO workers will receive relief through a R382 million TERS intervention, as government backs a plan to stabilise the troubled state-owned entity. The Minister of Employment and Labour, Nomakhosazana Meth, has confirmed the implementation of a new agreement between the South African Post Office (SAPO) and the Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF), aimed at preserving nearly 6,000 jobs and supporting the recovery of one of South Africa's most critical state-owned entities. Through the Temporary Employer-Employee Relief Scheme (TERS), the UIF will inject over R382 million into SAPO over six months. The funds will provide immediate financial relief to 5,956 employees while enabling SAPO to implement a long-term turnaround strategy. 'This is a bold and necessary step to protect workers and restore confidence in our public institutions,' said Meth. 'The TERS programme is not just a financial mechanism — it is a strategic tool to stabilise employment, support economic recovery and ensure that no worker is left behind.' Funds will be disbursed in monthly tranches through a dedicated TERS bank account. Meth emphasised that this will happen 'with strict governance, auditing and compliance measures in place.'

Budget: Why a VAT increase is the least bad option
Budget: Why a VAT increase is the least bad option

Mail & Guardian

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • Mail & Guardian

Budget: Why a VAT increase is the least bad option

The Gold and Foreign Exchange Contingency Reserve Account is not a piggy bank that can be used to solve South Africa's fiscal problems. South Africa is once again faced with a difficult fiscal decision, and once again, the country is leaning toward magical solutions over sustainable ones. As political pressure mounts to reverse the proposed 0.5% VAT hike, the Gold and Foreign Exchange Contingency Reserve Account (GFECRA) has re-entered public debate. Many are calling for the government to dip into this reserve to avoid raising taxes. But that would be a mistake. The GFECRA is not the solution to our fiscal problems. A VAT increase, while deeply unpopular, is the least damaging and most responsible option available right now. The GFECRA is a valuation account in the South African Reserve Bank that records the gains and losses on the country's gold and foreign exchange reserves as a result of currency fluctuations. When the rand depreciates, those foreign reserves are worth more in rand terms, resulting in a gain. When the rand strengthens, a loss is recorded. Crucially, the GFECRA is not a pool of liquid cash. It is not a piggy bank. Settling a portion of the GFECRA balance essentially realising some of those gains requires agreement between the Reserve Bank governor and the minister of finance. In 2024, a R250 billion settlement was agreed upon, with a portion transferred to the treasury. That helped manage debt and reduce borrowing costs. But the scale of that intervention cannot be repeated without undermining the Reserve Bank's financial integrity. To use the GFECRA again, the Reserve Bank would have to reduce its buffer against future losses. That is risky in a volatile global environment, and would send the wrong signal to markets about South Africa's commitment to prudent monetary policy and institutional independence. The GFECRA must remain a contingency buffer not a fiscal tool of convenience. The uncomfortable truth is that the government has only three options for increasing cash flow. It can cut spending, which is already politically treacherous and threatens critical public services. It can borrow more, which is fiscally reckless when South Africa is spending more than R382 billion a year just servicing existing debt more than it spends on health or policing. Or it can raise taxes. Of these three, raising VAT though unpalatable is the least damaging and the most effective in the short term. It is broad-based, difficult to evade, and comparatively easy to administer. While no option is painless, this is the only one that doesn't compromise the country's long-term fiscal stability. Yes, VAT is regressive. Yes, it affects the poor. But South Africa has an extensive list of zero-rated basic foodstuffs such as brown bread, maize meal and vegetables that shield the poor from the worst effects of a VAT increase. Moreover, targeted social grants and pro-poor spending can help offset the effect. Unlike income tax or corporate tax, VAT is hard to avoid and offers a reliable stream of revenue. And in the short term, reliability matters. The proposed 0.5% increase, combined with bracket creep, is estimated to raise R31.5 billion. That will keep the budget intact and support debt stabilisation. Delaying or scrapping this increase in favour of a politically expedient raid on the GFECRA would be short-sighted. Worse, it would send a dangerous message: that South Africa is unwilling to make difficult fiscal decisions and would rather erode the Reserve Bank's independence. This is not to say a VAT hike is a good solution. It isn't. But it is a necessary one, given the context. The real challenge is to grow the economy, broaden the tax base and reform our public finances in a sustainable way. That work cannot begin if we start by hollowing out institutional safeguards or avoiding hard choices. Using the GFECRA might feel like a clever escape. But it is not a long-term answer. The VAT increase, unpopular as it may be, is the honest path and honesty, in fiscal terms, is what South Africa needs most right now. Tara Roos is a policy writer, researcher and political analyst.

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