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Africa
Economy
Road/Rail Freight

Lower fuel price may be hijacked by e-toll debt

17 Aug 2022 - by Staff reporter
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While all indications are that South Africa’s price of petrol and diesel will reduce by around R2.60 and R2.30 per litre respectively on September 7, the first Wednesday of the month https://tinyurl.com/3re2xua7, the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse is concerned that Minister of Finance Enoch Godongwana may seize the opportunity of this petrol price reduction to increase the fuel levy by 25c to 30c per litre. This in order to raise additional revenue to cover the Gauteng freeway improvement bonds, which e-tolls have failed to do.

“Recently, Minister of Transport Fikile Mbalula indicated that an announcement on the e-toll decision is expected to coincide with the minister of finance’s medium-term budget policy statement, due in October,” says Wayne Duvenage, Outa CEO. Furthermore, there have been strong hints that the minister of finance will increase the fuel levy to offset the scrapping of e-tolls. “Should this happen, Outa will denounce this decision on the basis that the fuel levy has already been increased in excess of R2.50/l since the Gauteng freeway upgrade began in 2008. Government failed to take up Outa’s suggestion of a ring-fenced 10c/l increase to the fuel levy some 11 years ago, which would have settled the freeway bonds by today.”

Duvenage believes the government has made poor decisions in the past, not only on the various fuel levies and taxes, but also on the road financing options available to it. “Short-term financial gains lead to long-term negative ramifications for taxpayers. By increasing the fuel levy by 25c/l, an additional R5.5 billion will flow into Treasury’s coffers each year. Compare this to a correctly priced Gauteng freeway upgrade, which ought not to have cost the state more than R0.5bn a year to finance this capital investment over 20 years.”

Duvenage says this is another example of government’s “desperate financing decisions based on short-term external factors”, which result in negative ramifications playing out in the long term. “A classic example of this happened when the petrol price dropped from slightly over R14/l in mid-2014 to R10.31/l some eight months later in February 2015, and the then Minister of Finance Nhlanhla Nene decided to introduce massive and unnecessary increases to both the general fuel levy and the Road Accident Fund levy of 30c/l (14%) and 50c/l (48%) respectively. This decision alone added roughly R17bn to Treasury’s coffers each year, permanently adding 80c/l to the price of fuel.

“These decisions may provide government with quick-fix short-term tax gains, but they have a detrimental impact on the country over the long term. Government should instead be looking at introducing greater efficiency into managing the country’s affairs, as opposed to seeking ways to lean more heavily on its taxpayers.”

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