Title: Intergovernmental
1Intergovernmental Fiscal Review 2001 Select
Committee on Finance NCOP 10 October 2001
2Purpose and evolution
- Review of intergovernmental trends to support
budget and policy processes - 1999 IGFR
- focused largely on provincial fiscal trends
- 2000 IGFR
- made first attempt to cover local government
- but data weak or non-existent
- 2001 IGFR
- extends coverage to include housing and roads
- sets out trends in non-financial indicators
3Objective
- Allows for comparisons and benchmarks
- Assists provincial legislatures in considering
2000/01 annual reports - Informs policy-making process
- Is Govt a learning organisation?
- Promotes co-operative governance over budgeting
- Aligning policy, budget, planning processes
- Tool for NCOP to strengthen oversight
- How is Constitution responding to delivery?
4Chapter 1 Introduction
- Intergovernmental system components
- Fiscal system
- Lessons learned
- Key pointers
5Chapters 2-7 Provincial
- 2. Trends in provincial budgets
- 3. Education
- 4. Health
- 5. Social development
- 6. Housing, roads, and transport
- 7. Cross-sectoral issues
6Chapters 8-11Local government
- 8. Transformation challenges
- 9. Overview of municipal budgets
- 10. Transfers to local government
- 11. Capital investment
7Annexures A-F
- A. Provincial Fiscal Framework
- B. Provincial tables
- C. Division of Revenue
- D. Local government tables
- E. Demographic information
- F. Other provincial functions
- (e.g. agriculture, tourism)
8Summary of chapters
9Introduction (1) Chapter 1
- Overview of intergovernmental system
- 3 distinct, but interdependent spheres
- national role largely policy formulation
setting of norms and standards - 54 for protection sector, 8 for higher
education - provinces local government mainly responsible
for implementation - System premised on cooperative governance
10Introduction (2) Chapter 1
- Intergovernmental fiscal system
- revenue-sharing model
- national raises disproportionately large revenue
relative to spending on national functions - opposite true for provinces (own revenue 4)
- local government has more fiscal capacity, but
some municipalities have limited revenue bases - Pointers for better functioning of system
11Division of national revenue
- Total allocated R188,9 billion in 2000/01
- National R 74,4 bn (39,4)
- Provincial R 108,7 bn (57,6)
- Local R 5,7 bn ( 3,0)
- (more details see Table1.1 p.4)
- New emphasis on non-financial information to
assist decision makers
12Provincial trends (ch 2)
- Marked turnaround since 1998/99
- from deficit of R5,6bn to surplus of R0,6bn
- Improved financial management provide firm
foundation for accelerated service delivery - Provincial revenue kept pace with inflation
- National transfers grow strongly
- 7,8 a year from 1997/98 to 2000/01
- 7,6 nominal or 2,2 in real terms over MTEF
13Provincial trends (ch 2)
- National transfers (cntd)
- stronger growth in equitable share 7,7 pa over
MTEF - conditional grants grow 1 percentage point slower
- Provincial own revenue
- 4 of total provincial revenue, but still
important - Road traffic fees constituted 38,6
- Hospital patient fees improving, share reaching
10 - WC and GT account for over 40 of provincial
revenue
14Provincial trends (ch 2)
- Provincial expenditure
- did not keep pace with inflation up to 2000/01
- substantial funds allocated to debt repayment
- future looks good
- spending rises from R110bn in 2000/01 to R139 bn
in 2003/04 - translating to an average annual growth rate of
2,6 above inflation - Social services share stabilises around 81
- Non-social services expenditure recovers
- share rises from 16,3 in 1999/00 to 19,3 in
2003/04
15Provincial trends
16Education (ch 3)
- 39 of provincial spending
- varies from 36,4 (N Cape) to 44,2 (N P)
- 2,1 real spending growth 2000/01 to 2003/04,
following 2,4 decline to 2000/01 - 55,5 of provincial staff
- Share of personnel spending declining
- Enrolment declining, after rising somewhat
- Improved educator-learner and learner-classroom
ratios, and pass rates - 25 000 new classrooms built
17Health (ch 4)
- 24 of provincial spending, 28,2 of provincial
staff - Varies between 15,9 (Mpum) to 32,7 (Gtg)
- 1,7 real spending growth 2000/01 to 2003/04
- Shift to primary health care
- Improved access but equity issues remain
- per capita spending varies widely
- hospital bed availability
- distribution of professional staff
- Urgent attention to training
- Challenge to improve hospital management
- HIV/AIDS will increase demand for services
18Social development (ch 5)
- 19 of provincial spending
- Varies from 14,6 (Gtg) to 25,1 (NC)
- 3 real spending growth 2000/01 to 2003/04
- 3,9 million beneficiaries
- 1,9 million old-age, 1,1 million child support
- 65 000 new child support beneficiaries monthly
- Rapid growth in foster care, special care
- Reassessment of the social safety net
- Inequities in per poor person spending between
provinces
19Housing (ch 6)
- R16 bn transfers in housing subsidy since 1994
- Contributing to over 1,1 million houses
- Providing shelter to over 4,9m people
- 1 real spending growth 2000/01 to 2003/04
- Despite teething problems in early years,
evidence of improvement abounds - Sharp decline in rollovers from 71 in 1995/96 to
15 in 2000/01 - Increase in share of population in formal
dwellings with clean water and electricity - Affordability of municipal services by households
- Transfer of current stock of houses
20Roads (ch 6 cont.)
- 223 000 km are provincial roads
- Roads spending accounts for 3 of budget
- Low spending in past led to deterioration and
increase in rehabilitation, construction,
maintenance backlogs - Better prospects for the future
- 9 real spending growth 2001/02 to 2003/04
- Concerted effort to improve planning
- Emphasis on provincial-national-local
coordination - Improvements in motor license fee collections
21Personnel (ch 7)
- About 740 000 employees
- 8,5 decline in personnel 1997/98 to 2001/02
- Annual 0,2 personnel spending increase through
2003/04 - Non-social sector personnel
- From 5,9 (Gtg) to 23,9 (NP)
- Provinces with former homelands
- Attracting retaining skilled professionals
- in public sector and in poor provinces
- Skilled personnel critical to success in all areas
22 Provincial infrastructure (ch 7 cont)
- Infrastructure key to service delivery and
economic growth - Trends reflect decline and recovery
- 1997/98 2000/01 2003/04
- Spending 8,1 bn 7,6 bn 14,1 bn
- Provincial share 64 46
52 - Major backlogs in
- schools
- hospitals/clinics
- roads
- R3,7bn grant to assist in this regard
23Local Government Transformation Challenges
- Reduction from 843 to 284 municipalities
- re-alignment and re-assignment of powers and
functions (between spheres, within sphere) - integrating over 200 000 staff without raising
costs - implementation of reforms ranging from systems,
laws, planning and financial - restructuring of service delivery and expansion
of infrastructure to service all citizens - introduction and implementation of new
legislative environment (Structures Act, Systems
Act, MFMB, Prop Rates)
24Restructuring/Amalgamation (ch 8)
- Restructuring through REDs and amalgamation
- Shifting of functions between District and Local
municipalities - Funds follow function changes, but bigger effect
is shifting of personnel that this involves - Different conditions of service
- Pension fund contributions (Table 8.3 on page
126) - What salary level for similar jobs?
- Impact on tariffs and incidence of taxes
- Tshwane case study on page 136 (Ch 8)
25Local Govt Budgets (ch 9)
- Budgets
- Backward looking, so no demarcation info except
for a few sample municipalities - Poor classification and Data limitations
- 2000/01 Budgets grow by 15,7 to R 61,8 bn
- rapid growth in personnel expenditure
- flatter trajectory on capital and infrastructure
spending in order of R 13,7 bn - Average own source revenue
- Metros 97
- Secondary munis gt R 300 m 92
- Smaller munis lt R 300m 65
26Local Govt Budgets (ch 9)
- Income source
- Property rates 21
- Utilities (electr, water) 32
- Intergov transfers 8
- RSC levies 7
- Expenditure
- Salaries 31
- Bulk (electr, water) 30
- Capital charges 13
- Repairs and Maint 8
27Metro budgets
- Sector / Functional spending
- Electricity 30
- Water Sanitation 19
- Administration 8,8
- Public safety 7,5
- Roads and Stormwater 6,3
- Refuse 5,1
- Pilots to develop and improve the reporting
system to enable better management information
28Local Govt Transfers (ch 10)
- National Transfers
- Subsidy to poor households for basic services
- Expansion and rehabilitation of infrastructure
- Skills training and development to assist in
implementation - Proportion of allocation
- Equitable share 57
- Infrastructure 35
- Capacity 8
29Local Govt Transfers
- Average ES per household
- Smaller category B munis from 2001/02 to 2003/04
- R 510 to R 611 - Metros category A munis from 2001/02 to
2003/04 - R 151 to R 194 - Capital on infrastructure
- From 2001/02 to 2003/04 grow from R2,7 bn to
R2,9 bn
30Local Govt Transfers
- Capital / Infrastructure
- ability to expand services to all citizens faster
(basic services) - improve standards and level of services
- provide economic and other infrastructure unlock
and stimulate countrys growth potential - upgrade and update infrastructure (township/R293
areas)
31Local Govt Capital (ch 11)
- Grants, Borrowing or PPP
- Public Private Partnerships
- Examples Table 11.1
- Municipal borrowing
- leveraging of grants and revenue
- short term loans - expensive
- longer term loans - cheaper
- municipal bonds
- Stagnant borrowing at R20 bn
- Only INCA provides new lending in private sector,
DBSA in public sector
32IGFR Parliamentary Debate
- Tabling in NCOP on 9 Oct 2001
- Presentation to Select Committee on Finance in
NCOP on Wed 10 Oct at 1330 - Sectoral hearings
- Education and Welfare Friday 12 Oct (9am)
- Roads and Infrastructure Monday 15 Oct (9am)
- Health Tuesday 16 October (830am)
- Housing Wednesday 17 October (9am)
- Local Govt on Thursday, 18 Oct (9am)
- NCOP debate (23 and 24 Oct)
- IGFR on treasury website www.treasury.gov.za
- Also available from National Treasury
33SIYABONGA! RE A LEBOHA! THANK YOU! BAIE DANKIE!