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Thursday, March 13, 2025

Read Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana's full budget speech here

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Honourable Speaker, Thoko Didiza  

Deputy Speaker, Annelie Lotriet  

Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces, Refiloe Mtshweni-Tsipane  Deputy Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces, Les Govender  His Excellency, President Cyril Ramaphosa Honourable, the Deputy President Paul Mashatile  

Cabinet Colleagues  

Members of the Executive Council for Finance  

Honourable Members  

Governor of the South African Reserve Bank  

Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service  

Fellow South Africans  

I have the honour to table the following documents before this House:  

The 2025 Division of Revenue Bill;  

The 2025 Appropriation Bill;  

The 2025 Eskom Debt Relief Amendment Bill;  

The 2025 Public Sector Pension and Related Payments Bill;  The 2025 Revenue Laws Amendment Bill;  

The 2025 Estimates of National Expenditure;  

The 2025 Budget Review; and  

The 2025 Budget Speech. 

 

INTRODUCTION 

Madam Speaker,  

The postponement of the tabling of the Budget three weeks ago was a regrettable, but  perhaps an understandable feature of multiparty governance.  

It is a sign of a maturing and resilient democracy.  

The delay has stimulated an unprecedented level of public debate about the difficult policy  trade-offs we, as a nation, face.  

A vital debate about which policies to fund and how to fund them. About which priorities to  pursue now, and which ones we may need to delay in the context of our limited resources.  

As much as the debate has been dominated by the proposed increase to value-added tax  (VAT), the bigger debate must be about how we grow the economy for the benefit of the  majority.  

A bigger, faster growing economy, and the larger fiscal resources that comes with it, would  give us more fiscal room to meet more of our developmental goals.  

But the truth is that our economy has stagnated for over a decade. In that time, GDP growth  has averaged less than 2 per cent, far below the level required to meet our expanding list of  needs.  

In 2024, the economy grew by only 0.6 per cent. Over the medium term, GDP growth is  projected to average 1.8 per cent.  

To meet our goals of redistribution, redress and structural transformation, the economy  needs to grow much faster and in an inclusive manner. This is the central objective of the  current administration.  

Today’s Budget proposes a bold and pragmatic approach to achieving this formidable task.  

It calls for macroeconomic stability supported by sound fiscal policy. For the deepening of  structural reforms to remove the obstacles to growth and job creation. And for scaling up  infrastructure to unlock the productive capacity of the economy, while building a capable  state that supports all these efforts. 

The Budget remains committed to a balanced fiscal strategy.  

As projected in the 2024 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS), a budget primary  surplus of 0.5 per cent of GDP will be achieved in 2024/25, and this will grow to 0.9 per cent  in 2025/26.  

Government debt will stabilise, at 76.2 per cent of GDP in 2025/26, while the consolidated  budget deficit also narrows, to 3.5 per cent by 2027/28.  

Madam Speaker as debt stabilises, a growing primary surplus will enable the government to  reduce debt-service costs as a proportion of revenue.  

Some of those savings will be used to build up fiscal buffers that we need as protection against  future economic shocks. Shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic, and other uncertainties  stemming from the rising geopolitical tensions and the global economic ramifications thereof.  

Debt-service costs will amount to R389.6 billion in the current financial year. This translates  to 22 cents of every rand we raise in revenue. It is more than what we spend on health, the  police and basic education.  

We must reverse this trend and prevent the cost of debt from taking away resources that  could otherwise be spent on our pressing social needs, or to invest in growth.  

In this regard, our fiscal strategy stabilises debt service costs as a percentage of revenue in  2024/25 by maintaining a primary budget surplus.  

The Eskom debt relief arrangements are also effective and contribute to the improved fiscal  position.  

Eskom is now in a much better financial position than in 2023 when the debt relief was  originally announced.  

As a result of these improvements, we have decided to simplify the final phase of the debt  relief package.  

The last R70 billion debt takeover will now be replaced with R40 billion in 2025/26, and R10  billion in 2028/29. This will result in a saving for the government of about R20 billion. 

Honourable Members, these fiscal improvements are important milestones on our path to  fostering a stable macroeconomic environment that is a prerequisite for a higher level of  growth that promotes job creation, improves public services and reduces inequality.    

FOSTERING FASTER INCLUSIVE GROWTH  

  

Our strategy to achieve faster growth remains anchored on the following four pillars:  Maintaining macroeconomic stability,  

  • Implementing structural reforms,  
  • Improving state capability, and  
  • Accelerating infrastructure investment.  

Maintaining macroeconomic stability, inclusive of prudent fiscal policy, promotes stable  prices, lowers interest rates and enhances the country’s resilience to external shocks.  

This creates a conducive environment for investment.  

Implementing structural reforms removes impediments to growth and creates a solid  foundation for a high and sustained economic growth.  

Madam Speaker, it was out of the realisation that economic growth and fiscal stability are  mutually reinforcing, that Operation Vulindlela was formed as a joint initiative between the  Treasury and the Presidency, to fast track the implementation of structural reforms.    

Its objectives were to:  

  1. Stabilise the supply of electricity;  
  2. Create a competitive and efficient freight logistics system;  
  3. Reduce the cost and improve the quality of digital communication;  4. Ensure a stable, quality supply of water; and  
  4. Reform the visa regime to facilitate skilled immigration and support tourism.

Since its establishment in 2020, OV has made real progress in achieving these objectives.  

For example:  

  • The energy reforms have created a 22 500 mega-watt pipeline of projects. More than  10 000 mega-watts are formally registered with the NERSA, which is one of the last steps  in the regulatory process. These projects will contribute to reducing power cuts. 
  • The Freight Logistics Roadmap was approved. The roadmap allows private sector  participation and gives third-party access to any operator without discrimination in  accordance with the network statement.  
  • The cost of a 1.5GB data bundle has declined by 51 per cent, allowing individuals and  small businesses to access more affordable data.  
  • The water-use licenses backlog has been cleared, unlocking billions in investment and  freeing projects that had stalled because of the backlog.  
  • The water quality regulatory system was reinstated for the first time since 2014. This is  the Green Drop, Blue Drop and No Drop certification that enables effective intervention  in supporting failing municipalities to provide clean water to citizens.  
  • e-Visas for travellers from 34 countries have been introduced to significantly boost  tourism. The trusted employer scheme has been established to fast-track visa process  for major investors.  

These achievements have eased economic bottlenecks. And building on the successes, Phase  2 of OV will focus on:  

• Following through on existing reforms in energy, water, logistics and visa systems;  • Strengthening local government and improving the delivery of basic services;  • Harnessing digital public infrastructure as a driver of growth and inclusion; and  • Creating efficient, productive and inclusive cities.

 

INFRASTRUCTURE  

Madam Speaker, infrastructure is a key pillar of our growth strategy.  

It is the bedrock for economic development, a key source of jobs, and an avenue to scale-up  service delivery.  

INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING  

This budget reflects that understanding. Allocations towards capital payments are the fastest growing area of spending by economic classification.  

Public infrastructure spending over the next three years will amount to more than R1 trillion.  The spending will focus on three sectors:  

R402 billion for transport and logistics,  

R219.2 billion for energy infrastructure, and  

R156.3 billion for water and sanitation.  

In transport, the South African National Roads Agency (SANRAL) will spend R100 billion over  the medium term to keep the national road network in good condition.  

Provincial roads departments will reseal over 16,000 lane-kilometres of roads in their areas  of authority.  

The Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA) is making steady progress to rebuild  infrastructure to provide affordable commuter rail services.  

To sustain this progress, we have provisionally allocated an additional R19.2 billion over the  medium term for critical signalling upgrades.  

This will enable commuters from areas like Mamelodi, Kwa-Mashu, Motherwell and  Khayelitsha to catch a train every 10 minutes, to get to and from work and significantly reduce  the money that low-income households spend on transport. 

The allocation will also allow PRASA to maximise the potential of the 241 new trains delivered  through the rolling stock renewal programme.  

Despite the progress made, PRASA’s procurement system needs strengthening.  

The management of the entity have already instituting measures to strengthen their  procurement weaknesses. This includes getting support from the National Treasury to build  capacity and mitigate risks and undertaking live audits for large procurement projects.  

In water, we are investing in several large-scale dam projects that are ramping up or entering  construction.  

The Mkhomazi Project is expected to commence construction in November 2027, transferring  water to the Mngeni Water Supply System. This will increase the total capacity of the system  to 5 million households in eThekwini and 4 district municipalities in KwaZulu Natal.  

The Berg River-Voëlvlei Augmentation Scheme is expected to start in July 2026. The project  will improve the Western Cape’s Water Supply System, improving regional water security  while reliably supplying domestic, agricultural and industrial water users.  

To further accelerate infrastructure delivery and effectiveness, we are continuing reforms to  facilitate greater private sector participation, capital budgeting reform and alternative  infrastructure financing.  

PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS  

The new regulations for public-private partnerships (PPPs) have been finalised and will take  effect on 1 June 2025.  

The regulations reduce the procedural complexity of undertaking PPPs, create capacity to  support and manage PPPs, create clear rules for managing unsolicited bids, and strengthen  fiscal risk governance.  

The regulations also make provision for national departments to establish sector-specific PPP  units. These units will drive private sector participation (PSP), creating opportunities to  optimise the balance sheets of financially distressed state-owned companies.

The Department of Transport and Transnet will engage the market on PSP projects in the  following areas:  

  • The ore, chrome, coal and manganese lines.  
  • Expansion and automation of the ferrochrome and magnetite terminal at the port of  Richards Bay.  
  • The container and automotive sectors, including the potential designation of the SA  container port system as a regional trans-shipment hub for major shipping lines.  And establishment of independent rolling stock leasing company. 

Should Transnet require gap funding for its PSP projects, the Budget Facility for Infrastructure  (BFI) will consider these after proper packaging and financial structuring.  

Additional guarantees may also be considered to refinance the entity’s maturing debt as well  as its capital investment programme.  

In the energy sector, the Independent Transmission Programme will be launched later this  year.  

A request for information for a multi-line transmission package will also be issued by the  Independent Power Producers Office in July this year, followed by a request for proposals in  November.  

These will enable the private sector to play a key role in the expansion of the transmission  network.  

BUDGET FACILITY FOR INFRASTRUCTURE  

Madam Speaker, we have reconfigured the BFI to run multiple bid windows instead of just  one annual window.  

Earlier this week, we published a call for proposals under the new system.  

The first window is now open and will close mid-April. The next window will open soon  thereafter.

Financing decisions to determine the appropriate fiscal mechanism to support projects have  also been separated from the evaluation and budget processes.  

This will facilitate the mobilising of significant private finance and improve allocative  efficiency in fiscal support.  

ALTERNATIVE FINANCING ARRANGEMENTS  

Lastly, our efforts to diversify the financing strategy to support infrastructure are taking  shape.  

A credit guarantee vehicle to mobilize private sector capital by derisking projects, will be  launched in 2026. Its initial focus will be on independent transmission aimed at bridging the  energy transmission deficit. Once the vehicle has demonstrated its efficacy, it will be  broadened to include other sectors.  

Government will issue its first infrastructure bond in 2025/26. We will also introduce other  innovative financing instruments to diversify the infrastructure funding sources. Financial  institutions including pension funds, banks, development banks and international financial  institutions have already expressed interest in participating.  

This, Madam Speaker, is how we plan to leverage infrastructure investment to ease supply  side constraints to the economy and improve the quality of public services the people get.  

REVENUE AND TAX PROPOSALS  

Madam Speaker,  

There are several persistent spending pressures in health, education, transport and security.  These have to do with the government properly fulfilling its service delivery mandate.  

After careful consideration, the government has decided to fund these. Deferring the funding  of these sectors further would compromise the government’s ability to meet its constitutional  obligations to the people. 

To raise the revenue needed, the government proposes to increase the VAT rate by half- a percentage point in 2025/26, and by another half-a-percentage point in the following year.  

This will bring the VAT rate to 16 per cent in 2026/27.  

Government also proposes no inflationary adjustments to personal income tax brackets,  rebates and medical tax credits.  

These measures will raise R28 billion in additional revenue in 2025/26 and R14.5 billion in  2026/27.  

Madam Speaker, this decision was not made lightly. No Minister of Finance is ever happy to  increase taxes.  

We are aware of the fact that a lower overall burden of tax can help to increase investment  and job creation and also unlock household spending power.  

We have, however, had to balance this knowledge against the very real, and pressing, service  delivery needs that are vital to our developmental goals and which cannot be further  postponed.  

OPTING FOR VAT  

Honourable Members, we thoroughly examined alternatives to raising the VAT rate. We  weighed up the policy trade-offs involved, including increases to corporate and personal  income taxes.  

Increasing corporate or personal income tax rates would generate less revenue, while  potentially harming investment, job creation and economic growth.  

Corporate tax collections have declined over the last few years, an indication of falling profits  and a trading environment worsened by the logistics constraints and rising electricity costs.  

Furthermore, South Africa’s corporate income tax collections are already higher than most of  our peer countries.  

On the other hand, an increase to the personal income tax rate would reduce taxpayers’  incentives to work and save. 

Our top personal income tax rate and our personal income tax collections as a percentage of  GDP are far higher than those of most developing countries. Increasing it is therefore not  feasible.  

Taking on additional debt to meet the spending pressures was also not feasible. The amount  is simply too large. The cost of borrowing would be unaffordable. Our sub-investment credit  rating would also make this level of borrowing costlier and put us at risk of even further  downgrades.  

Madam Speaker, VAT is a tax that affects everyone. By opting for a marginal increase to VAT,  its distributional effect and impact were cautiously considered.  

The increase is also the most effective way to avoid further spending cuts and to enable us  extend the social wage.  

CUSHIONING HOUSEHOLDS  

The government is very aware of the cost-of-living pressures faced by households, including  high food and fuel prices and rising electricity and transportation costs.  

This is why we are taking concrete steps to protect vulnerable households.  

The is done through:  

  • Providing social grant increases that are above inflation.  
  • Expanding the basket of VAT zero-rated food items to include canned vegetables, dairy  liquid blends, and organ meats from sheep, poultry and other animals.  
  • We are also not increasing the fuel levy for another year, saving consumers around R4  billion.  

RESOURCING SARS  

Madam Speaker, broadening the tax base and improving the administrative efficiency of the  South African Revenue Service, allows us over time, to spread the tax burden more evenly  and equitably.  

With this in mind, SARS is allocated R3.5 billion in the current financial year and an additional  R4 billion over the medium term. 

By the end of February this year, SARS reported a significant increase in undisputed debt. This  means billions of Rands are owed to the State.  

The revenue collector has also detected 156 000 taxpayers who are not registered or have  not filed despite their substantial economic activity.  

I call on all South Africans to comply with the law and support SARS in its endeavour to collect  the revenues that enable government to fund and provide critical services.  

I also want to emphasise the importance of tax compliance.  

I thank all compliant taxpayers who pay their fair share of taxes. I also encourage those that  are not compliant to do the right thing.  

The rewards of higher tax compliance and efficiency take time. Once again, the investments  we make today in SARS will allow the collector the time to make improvements.  

SPENDING PRIORITIES AND THE DIVISION OF REVENUE  

Madam Speaker, the revenue proposed through the tax measures announced in this Budget  will contribute largely to us providing R232.6 billion in additional funding to key programmes  over the medium term.  

This amounts to R102 billion in 2025/26, R68 billion in 2026/27, and R62 billion in 2027/28.  

The funding is for spending pressures for infrastructure investments, social protection, a  higher-than-anticipated public-service wage agreement, and provisional allocations for  critical frontline services.  

Honourable members, in the last year alone public sector health system lost close to 9,000  health workers. We did not have the money to retain or replace them even after reprioritising  funds budgeted for consumables and medicines.  

Accruals in the sector, which is the money owed by departments to vendors for services  already provided, also ballooned to nearly R22 billion.  

This means that the money allocated to departments ends up paying for previous services  and goods rather than for the current needs, setting off a vicious cycle of budget shortfalls,  unpaid invoices, and a crisis in cashflow and the planning and predictability of budgets.   

This is an untenable situation that we could not leave unresolved.  

As a result, consolidated spending, which excludes interest payments, increases from R2.4  trillion in 2024/25 to R2.83 trillion in 2027/28.  

Provinces will receive R2.4 trillion over the MTEF period. This budget includes additional  allocations to support critical provincial functions related to health and education.  

We trust that the allocations will be used for their intended purposes.  

The local government equitable share will increase from R99.5 billion in 2024/25 to R115.7  billion in 2027/28. This is to fund increases in the cost of bulk water and electricity costs  provided for free to needy households.  

In 2025/26, 83 per cent of the local government equitable share provides a free basic services  package of R610 per month to 11.2 million poor households.  

Honourable Members, this package of free municipal services continues to be a key tool for  reducing poverty and inequality, raising living standards and facilitating access to greater  economic opportunities.  

PUBLIC SECTOR PERSONNEL AND WAGES  

Madam Speaker, a three-year wage agreement has been reached. Although the agreement  exceeds the 2024 Budget and MTBPS projections, its duration reduces uncertainty in budget  planning.  

This agreement will cost an additional R7.3 billion in 2025/26, R7.8 billion in 2026/27 and R8.2  billion in 2027/28.  

  

An amount of R11 billion is provisionally allocated over the next two fiscal years for the early  retirement initiative, whose intention is to attract younger employees into the public service.  Preliminary savings are expected to average R7.1 billion per year over the medium-to-long  term. The savings will be retained by departments.  

The interventions on the wage bill are aimed at ensuring that when key frontline staff are lost  through natural attrition and retirement, sectors are able to fill vacant posts to keep services  running effectively.

EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT AND BASIC EDUCATION  

Paying salaries constitute 76 per cent of provincial education budgets. This means that only  R24 out of every R100 of their budget is left for funding school infrastructure, meals for  learners from poor backgrounds, and stationery and textbooks, amongst others.  

Our learner-teacher ratios remain higher than we would like, meaning that we still need more  teachers in classrooms.  

To prevent compensation of employees from crowding out other equally important areas of  spending, R19.1 billion is added over the medium term to keep approximately 11 000  teachers in classrooms.  

The foundation to building the next generation of citizens who contribute economically and  socially to this great nation is early childhood development.  

Despite this, the subsidy for ECD has not increased from the 2019 level of R17 per day, per  child.  

To remedy this, an additional R10 billion over the medium term is allocated to increase the  subsidy to R24 per day per child. The extra funding will also support increased access to ECD  for approximately 700 000 more children, up to the age of four years old.  

HEALTH  

Health spending will grow from R277 billion in 2024/25 to R329 billion in 2027/28 to support  the equitable provision of public health services, including free primary healthcare.  

Like in provincial education, a significant portion of the provincial health budget is spent on  the salaries and wages.  

R28.9 billion is added to the health budget, mainly to keep about 9 300 healthcare workers in  our hospitals and clinics.  

It will also be used to employ 800 post-community service doctors, and to ensure that our  pharmacies do not run out of medicines.

SOCIAL SECURITY  

Honourable Members, social grants are allocated R284.7 billion in 2025/26. This allows us to  increase:  

  • The old age and disability grants by R130 to R2 315 in April.  
  • The Child Support Grant by R30 to R560 per month.  
  • The foster care grant by R70.  

The COVID19 Social Relief of Distress (SRD), in its current form, will be extended by a year to  end March 2026. R35.2 billion is allocated for this purpose.  

As announced by the President in the State of the Nation Address, the SRD will be used as a  basis for the introduction of a sustainable form of income support for unemployed people.  

The future form and nature of the SRD will be informed by the outcome of the review of active  labour market programmes.  

This is expected to be completed by September 2025.  

Madam Speaker, nearly 28 million beneficiaries will access social grants.  

The truth is that ours is one of the most comprehensive social safety nets among emerging  economies. This reflects our commitment to addressing poverty and inequality, while keeping  our spending sustainable.  

PEACE AND SECURITY  

In this budget, we have also made a provision to replenish funding for our security functions  and peace-keeping commitments.  

R9.4 billion is allocated to fund the defence force and correctional services.  

Over the medium term, R5 billion has been allocated to the Department of Defence to support  South Africa’s participation in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) mission  in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and to supplement existing peace keeping activities.  

We will continue working with the Department of Defence on ways to change the  composition of expenditure to modernise the defence force. 

Madam Speaker, combating financial crimes and corruption is essential to protecting the  integrity of our economy and the institutions that foster stability and social wellbeing.  

Funds are allocated for enhancing the financial forensic and accounting capabilities in our law  enforcement institutions, to further strengthen our ability to detect and prosecute complex  economic crimes.  

These efforts address recommendations from the Financial Action Task Force and the State  Capture Commission, ensuring that we continue to fight money laundering and the financing  of terrorism with urgency and precision.  

There are remaining issues that require work during the year which may require funding later  this year. These includes:  

  • Infrastructure projects in the BFI and the rolling stock fleet renewal programme;  Accommodating population changes that impact on the provincial equitable share  allocations;  
  • Strengthening capabilities in the Office of the Chief Justice, Statistics South Africa and  the South African Revenue Service; and  
  • Political party funding and infrastructure provision for royal houses.  BUILDING STATE CAPABILITY  

Madam Speaker, our ability to deliver quality public services depends on having a competent,  capable and ethical state.  

Delivering reliable and sustainable core services is a priority for this government.  

Our focus must remain on more effective and efficient service delivery, and a proper  combination between personnel expenditure, operating costs and the maintenance of  physical facilities and assets, supported by professional and efficient administration. 

BUDGET REFORMS  

For over a decade, budgets have been trimmed across the board.  

While these measures have helped maintain fiscal discipline, they have often been  implemented without a thorough interrogation of whether the funds we allocate truly  support our national priorities.  

We must acknowledge that over time budgets tend to grow incrementally, often carrying  forward historical allocations, without necessarily reflecting the evolving needs of our  country.  

This approach has led to inefficiencies, misalignments, duplications and, in some cases, the  continued funding of programmes that do not yield the intended impact.    

We recognise the urgent need to address this. We are not deaf to the public’s concern about  wasteful and inefficient expenditure.  

We know that we must earn the taxpayer’s trust every day, by spending public money with  care and ensuring that every rand collected is spent on its intended purpose.    

Since 2013, as part of the ongoing revaluation of the operations of government, the National  Treasury and provincial treasuries have undertaken 240 spending reviews.  

These reviews range from examining efficiencies in administrative functions, like office  accommodation, fleet management and overtime pay in various sectors, to measuring the  effectiveness of service delivery programmes in health, education and human settlements.  

The consolidated recommendations of these reviews will be taken to Cabinet in the next  month.  

The President has also undertaken to establish a committee between the Presidency and  Treasury to identify waste, inefficient and underperforming programmes. Thank you for this  commitment, Mr President!  

As the National Treasury, we are ready to take the lead to improve the effectiveness and  efficiency of spending. We will: 

  • Undertake an audit of ghost workers, starting with national and provincial departments.  
  • Use the ongoing, detailed review of labour market activation programmes and public  employment programmes to consolidate and rationalise the entire public employment  ecosystem. The aim of the review is to reduce duplication and improve operational  efficiencies across the more than 100 active labour market programmes in over 20  public institutions. The recommendations of this review will be presented to Cabinet in  due course.  
  • The Treasury will implement significant changes to the budget process by reassessing  the initial assumptions informing budget allocations, with a view to creating room for  improved spending.  

Madam Speaker, these reviews go beyond mere cost-cutting measures.  

They allow us to systematically assess whether public expenditure is effectively aligned with  the priorities of this government, and whether it delivers the best possible value for money  and impact for the people of South Africa while keeping us on the path of fiscal sustainability.  

These initiatives will give impetus to the slow implementation of the recommendations of  spending review.  

I call on Ministers, MECs, DGs, HoDs and every official responsible for public funds, to  embrace these efforts and play their part.  

IMPLEMENTING THE CONDITIONAL GRANT REVIEW  

The proliferation of conditional grants has necessitated a review of conditional grants to  reduce duplication and improve the effectiveness of programmes.  

This budget will implement the first phase of the recommendations of the review and includes  merging conditional grants in basic education and agriculture.  

Performance based conditional grants to metropolitan municipalities are also introduced,  linked to institutional, governance and financial reforms to improve services. 

BUILDING DISASTER RESILIENCE  

Madam Speaker, the incentives in our current disaster management system are skewed  towards relief and rehabilitation, when mitigation and readiness to minimise damage is the  most cost effective response.  

Our municipalities stand at the frontline of disaster response yet they are hamstrung by aging  infrastructure, bureaucratic fragmentation, and limited access to emergency funds.  

The priority is to reduce the administrative burden to access emergency funds. Every hour of  delay costs lives and livelihoods.  

Continuous improvements are made to the grant system to incentivise municipalities to  access a variety of funding instruments for disasters. These include their own budget, the  contingency reserve, conditional grant funding and insurance.  

The Budget allocates R1.7 billion to respond to future disasters over the medium term, while  R4 billion is provisionally allocated to address backlogs in recovery efforts for provinces and  municipalities.  

STRENGTHENING LOCAL GOVERNMENT  

The decline in municipal services is evident across cities, towns and rural villages highlighting  the systemic challenges faced by this varying group of municipalities.  

As outlined by the President in his State of the Nation Address, phase 2 of Operation  Vulindlela, the institutional structure of local government will be reviewed through the  updating of the white paper of local government.  

In line with the constitutional principle of funds follow function, the review of the local  government fiscal framework will examine how to appropriately finance local government,  relative to their functions and their form.  

Reforms to the revenue generating services of local government, namely water and  sanitation, electricity and refuse removal are underway.  

Six of the eight metropolitan municipalities have met the minimum requirements to  participate in the financial performance incentive grant, the Urban Development Financing  Grant. 

Further allocations in the programme are dependent on municipalities meeting specific  targets related set out in their performance improvement action plans.  

For 2025/26, this includes critical institutional, governance and management changes to  create an enabling environment for long term investment in infrastructure.  

By ring-fencing the revenues from these services, and running operating surpluses, these  business units can generate funds for infrastructure improvements to deliver quality and  reliable services.  

CONCLUSION  

Madam Speaker, in conclusion, allow me to reiterate that through the policy choices we have  made and the carefully targeted allocations we are proposing, public institutions should be in  a better position to continue delivering much needed services to the people.  

This budget reflects our collective efforts to chart a path through difficult times to prosperity.  

It represents a vision of the future and a realistic assessment of the present, as well as the  options available to us right now.  

This vision can only be achieved by making difficult but considered policy choices, choices that  weigh up the trade-offs and commit to a way forward.  

  

Honourable Members, this budget is the product of the combined and careful consideration  of the Cabinet of the Government of National Unity, that has done the difficult and necessary  work of assessing the alternatives open to us at the current juncture in our growth journey.  

Honourable Members, this budget is also a proposal to you as the Parliament that has been  democratically elected to represent the aspirations and interests of all South Africans by  confronting the difficult choices needed to move our country forward.  

It is in this spirit that I draw on the words of the pan-African leader, Amilcar Cabral, who  advised us to:  

“Always bear in mind that the people are not fighting for ideas, for the things in anyone’s  head. 

They are fighting to win material benefits, to live better and in peace, to see their lives go  forward, to guarantee the future of their children.”  

The policy choices proposed here are about achieving these material benefits. They are about  moving South Africa and all South Africans forward into a better, more prosperous and  equitable future.  

Speaker, as I close, allow me to express my deepest gratitude to the President and Deputy  President for their counsel, their support and for their leadership.  

Thank you also to the Deputy Ministers of Finance and the excellent National Treasury team  led by the Director-General.  

Thank you to the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service and the Governor of  the South African Reserve Bank, for their astute stewardship of these two key institutions.  

Thank you to my Cabinet colleagues, the Ministers’ Committee on the Budget, and the Budget  Council, who share the heavy load of the tough decisions that we must make to maintain  the sustainability of our public finances.  

To the Parliamentary Committees of Finance, Appropriations and Public Accounts, I express  my sincere appreciation.  

To my dear wife and family, your care, understanding and support is a constant source of  strength and inspiration. Thank you.  

  

Lastly, thank you to South African people who continue to entrust their aspirations to us. 

BUSINESS REPORT 

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