16 November 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)
The IMF wants King Mswati III to make a ‘sacrifice’ in his own spending to help 
save the economy of Swaziland.


And Joannes Mongardini, leader of the IMF Mission to Swaziland that has 
just finished a two-week visit to the kingdom, said there was no need 
for public service wage cuts. The money could be saved from cutting 
spending on the army, the police and politicians’ allowances.

The reality, said Mongardini, was that the old and sick were suffering most 
from the financial crisis in Swaziland.

His comments came as the IMF reported that the economic meltdown in the kingdom 
had reached a ‘critical’ stage.

Joannes Mongardini was speaking on the BBC World Service Focus on Africa 
programme today (16 November 2011). The programme was broadcast live in 
Swaziland on the state-controlled SBIS 
radio station. The last time the BBC broadcast material on Focus on 
Africa that was critical of King Mswati, sub-Saharan Africa’s last 
absolute monarch, the programme was banned in Swaziland.

Mongardini told the BBC that the most worrying part of the financial crisis was 
the impact on the most vulnerable members of society – orphans and 
vulnerable children (OVCs) and the elderly. He said the Swazi Government owed 
OVCs US$10 million.

Asked by the BBC whether the amount of the Swaziland budget that went to King 
Mswati should be reduced, Mongardini said, ‘We would expect all Swazis 
to make a sacrifice.’

Mongardini also said he didn’t believe there needed to be public service wage 
cuts. He said it would be possible to meet the IMF’s target of 5 percent cuts 
by reducing the cost of Swaziland’s army, police forces and the 
‘very generous’ allowances that were paid to politicians.

He said the loan announced by the Swazi Government yesterday that would 
guarantee that public servants would be paid this month was not a 
long-term solution. It didn’t solve the underlying problem in Swaziland 
which was that the government had the largest public sector wage bill in 
sub-Saharan Africa.
Earlier, in a media statement the IMF said the fiscal crisis in Swaziland has 
reached a critical 
stage. the Swazi Government no longer was collecting enough revenue to 
cover ‘essential government expenditures, including the wage bill’. 


It went on, ‘More importantly, key social programs, like the fight against 
HIV/AIDS, free primary education, the support for orphaned and 
vulnerable children, and elderly grants, are being negatively affected.’

It said the Swazi Government had unpaid bills of E 1.5 billion (5.3 percent of 
gross domestic product—GDP). 


This was reducing private sector activity, with various enterprises 
dependent on government contracts having to lay off workers or shutting 
down, the IMF said. 


The IMF said Swaziland would ‘continue to face severe liquidity constraints 
over the coming months’. 


It called on the Swaziland Government to protect education, health, and 
pro-poor spending from further cuts.

Link 
http://swazimedia.blogspot.com/2011/11/imf-calls-for-sacrifice-from-king.html 

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