9 August 2011

(From Swazi Media Commentary www.swazimedia.blogspot.com Also
on Facebook at 
http://www.facebook.com/Swazi.Media.Commentary?v=wall#!/group.php?gid=142383985790674&ref=ts
 and Twitter at http://twitter.com/SwaziMedia)
Although South Africa has pledged to give Swaziland a loan of up to R2.4 
billion (US$354 million) will King Mswati III’s kingdom, actually receive the 
money?

 
When it made its loan announcement on 3 August 2011, the South African Treasury 
said was a ‘conditional guarantee’ only.

Among the conditions were that Swaziland meets the technical and fiscal 
reforms required by the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

But, as we all know, Swaziland has failed to meet the IMF requirements. 
Simply put, the IMF wants to see an increase in government revenue 
(through taxes, mainly) and a decrease in public spending (by reducing 
the salary bill for public service workers).

The Swazi Government, handpicked by King Mswati, sub-Saharan Africa’s last 
absolute monarch, failed to make much headway in either of these. Public sector 
workers, most notably the teachers, have had a series of work 
stoppages against the proposed measures and are threatening all-out 
protests if their salaries are cut, or if teachers are retrenched.

It was because of the government’s failure to control income and 
expenditure that the IMF did not issue its so-called ‘letter of comfort’ that 
would have supported Swaziland’s bid to get a loan from the 
African Development Bank (AfDB). 


And because it was unable to secure the AfDB loan, the Swazi Government went 
begging to South Africa.

Now, the South African Treasury has stated it will grant a R2.4 billion loan in 
three stages, starting this month (August 2011) once ‘the 
negotiations with the relevant parties have been finalised’.

That surely means, once South Africa is satisfied that Swaziland has got 
control of its finances. But, as things stand, with no agreement on 
salary cuts, that control is not there.

So what happens next? If, as seems likely, the Swazi Government fails to 
get an immediate agreement on cuts, it will not have met a major 
requirement for the loan. South Africa will then have to decide whether 
to grant the loan anyway. There are growing fears in South Africa that 
unless something is done about Swaziland without delay it will become an 
economic basket case like Zimbabwe and will be a massive drain on the 
whole Southern Africa region.

Because of that the loan may be given even without the cuts. But it will only 
delay by a few months the meltdown of the Swazi economy. The loan of 
R2.4 billion is roughly the equivalent of five months government 
spending in Swaziland. Chicken feed.

Here is the list of fiscal measures the South African Government wants to 
see Swaziland make. Decide for yourself whether you think King Mswati’s 
boys will be able to deliver.

Table in parliament the Public Finance Management Bill by October 2011;
Implement the Fiscal Adjustments Roadmap [the plan Swaziland gave to the IMF to 
save the economy] by February 2012;
Protect the peg between the lilangeni and rand;
Agree on priority spending programmes as contained in the Staff Monitored 
Programme that was agreed between the Government of the Kingdom of 
Swaziland and the International Monitory Fund; and
Implement acceptable financial reporting and finalise and implement an auditing 
bill.

See also

S AFRICA SETS OUT LOAN 
CONDITIONShttp://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2011/08/s-africa-sets-out-loan-conditions.html


Link http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2011/08/doubts-over-swazi-loan-bailout.html 

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