‘No way to prevent a downgrade’

Brace yourself for a

downgrade.

That was the message from

Dawie Roodt, chief economist

of Efficient Group, following

President Jacob Zuma’s

cabinet reshuffle last week

that saw finance minister

Pravin Gordhan replaced

by previous home affairs

minister Malusi Gigaba.

“I don’t see any way

that we can prevent a

downgrade,” said Roodt.

“It is absolute state capture

and the goals have been

achieved. Those who wanted

to be are now in charge of

the South African coffers.”

The rand started to fall

when then finance minister

Pravin Gordhan was recalled

from an investment roadshow

in the UK ahead of the cabinet

reshuffle that cost him his job.

By early Friday morning it had

moved from R12.80 to the US

dollar to R13.60 and the by

the time of going to press it

was hovering around R13.54.

“State capture means

more incompetence, more bad

management, more

weak economic growth,

more unemployment,”

said Roodt. “The picture is

incredibly gloomy.”

Economist Mike Schüssler

said the appointment of

Malusi Gigaba as finance

minister would do little to

calm the market.

“He has no business or

finance credentials but he

does have strong links to the

Guptas,” said Schüssler. “He

has denied the allegations

around him and the Guptas,

but I don’t think that is going

to hold much ground in the

market.”

He said Gigaba’s track

record was insipid at best.

As Minister of Public

Enterprises it was under his

watch that SAA chair Dudu

Myeni was appointed – with

SAA performing worse than

ever before – while Eskom

awarded a contract worth

more than R564 million to a

coal mining company owned

by the Guptas. The visa fiasco

implemented during his

tenure as minister of home

affairs cost South Africa

millions in lost revenue. He

is a minister also depicted as

being stubborn and arrogant.

“The fact of the matter

is it is not really about

Gigaba or any other cabinet

appointments, but rather the

president,” said Schüssler.

“The running of the country

and the political decisionmaking

is causing massive

uncertainty which is affecting

the economic market

negatively. It is not as simple

as just the rand falling. That

was just the immediate

implication.”

A potential break-down

of fiscal discipline will

lead to a string of negative

consequences – including the

credit rating downgrade and

lower business confidence.

Interest rates will go up

and the government will have

less funds to service debt,

meaning less money to go

around for infrastructure,

transport, education, health

and so forth.

More worrying though

are the predictions that

this is just the start of the

president’s move to overhaul

National Treasury and a host

of other state institutions

including the Reserve Bank

and the government pension

fund.

“They are now in control

of one of the largest pension

funds in the world,” said

Schüssler.

“This is far from over,”

said Roodt. “Much of what

happens next politically will

depend on the outcome of

the motion of no confidence.

Before that process is

concluded it is very difficult

to predict anything.”

He said one certainty was,

however, the downgrade.

“It is not about if we get

downgraded any more but

rather whether it will be one

or two or even three notches.”

Save South Africa founder

Sipho Pityana said the

cabinet reshuffle was clearly

on behalf of the Gupta family

– an insult to the suffering

of millions of South Africans

over many decades, while

OUTA chairman Wayne

Duvenage said the personal

interests of one man were

now holding the people of

South Africa to ransom.

Along with other analysts

contacted by FTW, they agree

that Zuma has taken a huge

political risk – one that will

be at the cost of South Africa

and its economy if it pays off.