BusinessDay.gif

 

 

South African policies help reduce poverty, says World Bank report

 

 

SAPA, Business Day, Johannesburg, 4 November 2014

 

South Africa's fiscal policies lifted 3.6-million people out of poverty in
2010-11, a World Bank report has found.

 

The SA Economic Update, released on Tuesday, found that SA's fiscal policies
are cutting the rates of poverty and inequality, and that tax and social
benefits are effectively redistributing income from rich to poor.

 

"We find that fiscal policy is very progressive in South Africa - it
benefits the poor more than the rich," World Bank economist Catriona
Purfield told reporters in Pretoria.

 

"We find that because of fiscal policy, large reductions are made in poverty
and inequality - in fact they are the largest reductions due to fiscal
policies in our sample of 12 countries."

 

The other 11 middle-income sample countries were Armenia, Bolivia, Brazil,
Costa Rica, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Indonesia, Mexico, Peru and
Uruguay.

 

Ms Purfield said the report showed that SA's tax system was slightly
progressive, in that the rich paid a higher share than the poor in income
tax and value-added tax.

 

She said social spending, such as child support and disability grants, old
age pensions and free basic services lifted the lowest income from a "tiny"
R200 a year, to R2,800 in 2010-11.

 

"Because of those cash transfers... and free basic services, the poverty
rate after receiving those falls to 39% (from 46.2%)," Ms Purfield said.

 

"That is a reduction of 3.6-million people - you have lifted them above the
poverty line thanks to your effective use of fiscal policy."

 

She said the use of policy also lowered the Gini co-efficient on income,
which measures inequality.

 

However, even with a progressive tax system, inequality in SA was still
higher than the other 11 countries in the sample. This was because it was
one of the most unequal countries in the world.

 

"Even though South Africa has a very effective use of its fiscal tools, the
original problems in income inequality are so high that South Africa is
going to need other things to help it address the problem of inequality," Ms
Purfield said.

 

"To make further progress going forward, you need to complement fiscal
policy with higher more inclusive growth that essentially generates jobs,
especially at the lower end of the distribution."

 

Sapa

 

From:
http://www.bdlive.co.za/economy/2014/11/04/south-african-policies-help-reduc
e-poverty-says-world-bank-report

 

 

 

World Bank text reproduced on AllAfrica.com

 

 

South Africa lifts 3.6 million people out of poverty and cuts the rate of
extreme poverty by half, as a result of its use of fiscal policy. Tax and
social benefits effectively redistribute income from the rich to the poor,
according to the South Africa Economic Update released by the World Bank
today.

 

"This report provides evidence that activist fiscal policies have helped
South Africa reduce poverty and inequality even though these remain pressing
developmental challenges," says Asad Alam, World Bank Country Director for
South Africa. "We hope that this analysis will help inform and deepen the
ongoing debate on the broader policies needed to attack poverty and
inequality".

 

The South Africa Economic Update 6 which has a special focus section on
Fiscal Policy and Redistribution in an Unequal Society assesses the
distributional impact of government taxation and spending and how these
tools address poverty and inequality. Tackling these twin challenges in a
society that is one of the most unequal in the world is at the heart of
South Africa's National Development Plan which sets ambitious targets of
eliminating poverty and cutting the Gini coefficient to 0.6 by 2030.

 

This Update shows that the proportion of the South African population that
are living on $1.25 per day or less, an international measure of extreme
poverty, is cut in half through the use of fiscal policies.

 

This rate of extreme poverty falls from 34.4 percent before the use of
fiscal policy to 16.5 percent after its use reflecting mainly the impact of
cash transfers such as the child support and disability grants and the old
age pensions. These cash transfers lift the income of the poorest decile
tenfold.

 

Thanks to effective use of fiscal policy to achieve redistribution, the Gini
coefficient on income falls from 0.77 to 0.59. The report also shows that
the burden of taxes falls on the richest in South Africa. The income of the
richest decile goes from being over 1000 times bigger than the income of the
poorest decile, to being 66 times bigger after the impact of taxes and
transfers.

 

"South Africa achieves the largest reductions in poverty and inequality
compared to other middle income countries sampled in the report. The
reductions are higher than what countries such as Brazil, Indonesia,
Ethiopia, Mexico and Argentina achieve through fiscal redistribution."
explains World Bank Senior Economist, Gabriela Inchasute.

 

But, even with such a progressive tax system, inequality in South Africa
remains higher than in the other countries in the sample. With fiscal
deficits and debt already high, and the fiscal system already achieving a
lot of redistribution, there is little space left in the government's purse
to do more to alleviate poverty and inequality via fiscal policy.

 

"We see from the analysis in the Update that fiscal policy goes a long way
towards redistribution but reducing poverty and inequality further in a way
that is consistent with fiscal sustainability will require a combination of
better quality and more efficient public services but most importantly
greater employment opportunities," says World Bank Lead Economist, Catriona
Purfield.

 

The report argues that critically, faster and more inclusive economic growth
that generates jobs and higher incomes for the poor would reinforce the
effectiveness of fiscal policy.

 

Recent Economic Developments

 

This Economic Update also provides a review of recent economic developments
and assesses South Africa's economic prospects. Domestic factors and a
fragile global recovery pose significant headwinds to South Africa's growth
performance.

 

The report's forecast for real GDP growth has been revised downward to 1.4
percent for 2014 and 2.5 percent for 2015, from 2.7 and 3.4 percent in the
previous update due to the impact of prolonged labor unrest and the
shortages in electricity supply. It envisages a slow and gradual return to
modest economic growth over the medium term.

 

Public investment helps to ease infrastructure constraints and private
investment and household consumption gradually regain pace as external
demand strengthens and confidence improves.

 

However, to boost economic growth, South Africa needs to quickly address
infrastructure constraints and broaden structural reforms if it is to
succeed in reducing the unacceptably high levels of joblessness and
inequality prevailing in the economy.

 

From: http://allafrica.com/stories/201411040858.html

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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