South Africa seeks funds for $20.5b infrastructure

Bloomberg

South Africa is seeking investments from multilateral lenders, commercial banks and pension funds in what a senior ruling party official said will be a $20.5 billion infrastructure program.
The program will focus on “network industries such as rail and ports, energy, broadband connectivity, water, sanitation and human settlements,” Paul Mashatile, the treasurer-general of the African National Congress, said in a speech to London’s Chatham House.
The government will pitch projects to potential funders, and a symposium will be held on June 23 to discuss the program, the presidency said.
South Africa announced a $29 billion support program for an economy that the central bank forecasts will contract 7% this year as a result of the coronavirus outbreak and a lockdown to curb its spread.
However less than half of the package is new money, and with the budget deficit projected to exceed 10% of gross domestic product this year, the government will have to tap external funding sources to spur economic growth even though it would drive up debt.

“We have now generated a project pipeline,” Kgosiento Ramokgopa, head of the investment and infrastructure office in the presidency, said in an interview on PowerFM radio station. “We are not looking at getting money from the fiscus.”

The country may need $100 billion to recover, Mashatile said.
“About 1.8 million jobs will be lost during this period, mostly among the youth,” he said. “This is why we will have to push for massive infrastructure spending within labor-intensive sectors.”
Ramokgopa said the program will create a “huge number” of jobs. He didn’t give details of which funders have been approached and what projects are under consideration. The cabinet discussed them on Wednesday, he said.
“Government is already in discussion with international partners such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the New Development Bank and the African Development Bank to raise $27 billion as part of our immediate response to the pandemic,” Mashatile said.

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