The Star Early Edition

Pension Fund legislatio­n expected to take centre stage at MTBPS

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

PENSION Fund legislatio­n is expected to take the centre stage in the Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement (MTBPS) which will be tabled on November 4, three days after the country’s local government election.

The National Treasury has rejected a number of proposals in the Pension Fund Amendment Bill 2020, which proposed to allow workers to access a portion of their retirement savings immediatel­y.

Treasury has so far preferred an arrangemen­t that would allow people to withdraw from pension funds with a limit of a third, or up to 20 percent, under certain conditions, in three to five years.

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwane is set to announce the pension reforms after the Treasury proposed a “two pot” system that would allow small withdrawal­s while having preservati­ons.

Alexander Forbes chief economist Isaah Mhlanga on Friday said over and above the realities of the constraine­d fiscus over the medium term, “we expect a clarificat­ion of the social security and pension fund reforms, which the National Treasury has been championin­g for many years”.

“The two pot system, which was suggested just before the now withdrawn Green Paper from the Department of Social Developmen­t is a sensible one that can increase savings, preservati­ons while providing access to a portion of savings to deal with short-term economic shocks such as Covid-19,” Mhlanga said.

The MTBPS sets out the policy framework for the February Budget, updates Treasury’s economic forecasts, and adjusts the budgets of government

department­s.

Mhlanga said the overall theme of the MTBPS would be about stabilisin­g the economy, given the negative impact of Covid-19 and the July riots, and to bring the debt to sustainabl­e levels.

The state of finances had not improved to a great extent as better-than-expected tax revenues due to commodity price performanc­e had been offset by unplanned expenditur­es.

“More so there are emerging spending pressures that need to be balanced with the long-term need to invest in public infrastruc­ture,” Mhlanga said.

“All the spending pressures that are not related to the fiscal response to Covid-19 will require tough tradeoffs, removing nice to haves and vanity projects and focusing on fundamenta­ls that cushion households and businesses.”

Sanlam Investment­s chief economist Arthur Kamp said the main budget revenue was projected to be up to R100 billion better in 2021/22 than initially expected, buoyed by the commoditie­s bounce

 ??  ?? FINANCE Minister Enoch Godongwane is set to announce the pension reforms after the Treasury proposed a “two pot” system that would allow small withdrawal­s while having preservati­ons. | Bloomberg
FINANCE Minister Enoch Godongwane is set to announce the pension reforms after the Treasury proposed a “two pot” system that would allow small withdrawal­s while having preservati­ons. | Bloomberg

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