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Moneyweb 23 Feb 2022  #Budget2022

Hi John

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana’s first national budget does not contain any significant surprises, although an R181 billion tax windfall significantly improved the government’s fiscal position. The windfall stems from the unexpected tax revenues flowing from high commodity prices.

Many people will be sceptical about whether the government will be able to implement the budget efficiently. Still, in the context of the current economic climate, it sends positive signals to the world that the government has arrested the fiscal slide we’ve seen over the past few years.

Most South Africans will also benefit as only sin taxes were raised, and the National Treasury did not increase any other taxes such as personal income tax or Vat. The fuel and RAF levies also remain unchanged ¾ the first time in many years!

As was announced last year, the corporate tax rate will drop from 28% to 27% next year.

The R181 billion windfall also improved the most essential fiscal indicators. The budget deficit will be around 5.7% of GDP, much better than last year’s expectation of 6.8%.

The total debt-to-GDP ratio is expected to be around 70%, lower than last year’s expectation that it may rise to about 80%.

All in all, not a bad budget.

Enjoy Moneyweb’s budget coverage.

If you have any questions, email me at ryk@moneyweb.co.za

 

Ryk van Niekerk
Regards,
Ryk van Niekerk
Editor, Moneyweb

Budget highlights: What you need to know

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana's first national budget does not contain any significant surprises. OPEN IN APP

Some breathing space for battle fatigued taxpayers

No increase in tax rates and inflationary relief for bracket creep. OPEN IN APP

Economic growth forecast at 2.1% this year

 
Government says the outlook reflects a slowdown in recovery compared to 2021. OPEN IN APP

Several tax policy changes in the pipeline

 
While the rebuilding of Sars continues. OPEN IN APP

E-tolls here to stay, for now

 
Government again fails to make long-anticipated statement on the future of the scheme. OPEN IN APP

Government recommits to infrastructure investment to support economy

 
R17.5bn provisionally set aside for infrastructure catalytic projects in MTEF. OPEN IN APP

More than R308bn allocated to bailing out failing SOEs

 
Denel earmarked for R3bn as government admits defence SOE cannot meet its obligations as they fall due. OPEN IN APP