(From Swazi Media Commentary 20 September 2010 www.swazimedia.blogspot.com Also
on Face book at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts).





  Swaziland’s inept
 Finance Minister Majozi
 Sithole has admitted his ministry has spent E3 million to collect 
the same amount of money in tax.

     The
 Swaziland economy is in freefall and there are fears that from next 
month (October 2010) the Swazi government won’t be able to pay salaries 
to people on its payroll, including civil servants, teachers and medical
 workers.

     Guests
 at a gathering organised to discuss the Southern African Customs Union 
(SACU) laughed
 out loud when Sithole told them, ‘You know, 
graded tax that’s about E3 million costs us about E3 million to 
collect.’

     And
 who can blame them? Sithole has resided over the collapse of the Swazi 
economy for 10 years and as I reported in March 2009, he isn’t even able
 to do simple
 arithmetic when it comes to presenting reports.



      As
 well as showing his incompetence in collecting revenues, Sithole revealed to 
the same meeting that his plea for government 
departments to reduce their budgets by 14 percent had fallen on deaf ears.

     On
 average cuts are only 8 percent. And some ministries ‘just refused’ to 
make cuts, he said.

     Despite
 this, Sithole continues to whistle in the dark about the future 
prospects of the Swazi economy. On Wednesday (15 September 2010)  I reported 
his claim
 that the European Union (EU) was willing to help him meet the civil
 servants’ salaries bill next month – a claim not substantiated by the 
EU and opposed by progressives
 who want an improvement in human rights in the kingdom ruled by King Mswati 
III, sub-Saharan Africa’s last absolute monarch.

     Swaziland’s
 economy is in freefall because in the past it over-relied on income 
from SACU.
 This was cut from E6 billion to E1.9 billion (250
 million US dollars) this year and the Swazi government 
has struggled to make ends meet. SACU receipts accounted for 66 
percent of the national budget last year, from 71 percent in the previous year.



     Sithole
 revealed that the kingdom’s wages and salaries bill was so huge 
that all ‘non-SACU’ receipts were not enough to cover it.

     Last
 month (August 2010), the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
 refused
 to support Swaziland’s application for a loan from the African 
Development Bank because the government had not made attempts to control
 its spending.
Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2010/09/swazilands-inept-finance-minister.html 





      

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