In a search for elusive higher growth rates, conversations in SA have been about what further spending we could squeeze out of an already stretched Treasury or to question the Reserve Bank’s capacity to use monetary policy to stimulate an economy that has failed to breach the 2% growth mark since 2013.
With SA’s debt-to-GDP levels rising to more than 80% from about 20% at the start of the last global recession in 2008 and set to increase further, even the harshest critics of the National Treasury and finance minister Tito Mboweni understand the limitations. Downgrades of our credit ratings to junk status by the leading ratings agencies have been sobering.
The clear limitations on the Treasury have seen some policymakers and commentators focusing on the role that the Reserve Bank could play in stimulating growth. For much of the course of his term as governor, Lesetja Kganyago has had to bat off calls to slash interest rates to stimulate domestic consumption. To do so, the monetary policy committee would in essence have to suspend its constitutionally set mandate of inflation targeting.
