Mboweni warns a third wave of Covid-19 could hurt country's ratings

19 March 2021 - 08:32 By Promit Mukherjee
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Tito Mboweni said any third wave would have to be handled so that the country could still keep the economy going, or it would hurt the fiscal framework.
Tito Mboweni said any third wave would have to be handled so that the country could still keep the economy going, or it would hurt the fiscal framework.
Image: Elmond Jiyane/GCIS

Finance minister Tito Mboweni said on Thursday that a third wave of the coronavirus could destabilise the government's efforts to control its finances and avoid a further downgrade of the country's sovereign rating.

Two of the top three ratings agencies — Moody's and Fitch — downgraded SA's sovereign rating further into junk in November on concerns about rising debt levels and the government's ability to raise revenues and pay off debt amid the economic shock inflicted by the pandemic.

Mboweni was replying to questions in a virtual parliament session where he said the ratings agencies would be looking closely at how the government was moving on its promised structural reforms such as infrastructure growth, telecom spectrum allocation, reliable power supply and reducing the public sector wage bill.

“If it (reform) was seen to be deviating from our fiscal framework, then we're going to be in trouble,” Mboweni said, and warned that a third wave of coronavirus could hurt the efforts.

“I'm scared that the third wave is coming ... It's going to be more vicious than the second one,” he said.

He said any third wave would have to be handled so that the country could still keep the economy going, or else it could hurt its fiscal framework.

Africa's most industrialised country saw a first wave of coronavirus when it was already in recession. It had to impose two hard lockdowns to curb the spread of infections, setting the economy back by 13 years and pushing millions more into unemployment at a time when almost a third of the population was already jobless.

The finance minister said the country's floating exchange rate, low and stable inflation and a well-regulated financial market were positive factors that could lend support in the event of another crisis.

“I think we are on a good wicket, and I am at the crease.”

Reuters


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