Last Updated Sunday 5th September 2010



Strike – budget under pressure

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

AS UNIONS canvassed their members on whether to accept the government’s latest wage offer to end a crippling public service strike, analysts warned the terms of the settlement would put the budget deficit under pressure and may even prompt rating agencies to take a closer look at South Africa’s credit ratings.

Public Service and Administration Minister Richard Baloyi said the government had no choice but to go out and borrow money. Baloyi said an extra R7- billion had to be raised, above the current R297bn public service wage bill.

Government raised its pay offer to public servants from 7 to 7,5 percent, with a housing allowance of R800 a month, up from its offer of R700. The unions had been demanding 8,6 percent and a R1000 housing allowance.

After two years of surplus, the budget deficit widened to 6,7 percent of gross domestic product in 2009-10, with plans to trim it to about 4 percent by 2013, and to moderate borrowing.

“Any way you (look at it), it’s exceptionally difficult for government to give in to the high wage demands in this environment,” said Nedbank chief economist Dennis Dykes.
“It will mean they have to cut expenditure elsewhere … They can cut on fixed investment spending and then you would have a situation where the economy doesn’t grow,” he said.
At 28 percent, South Africa’s debt-to- GDP ratio pales in comparison with the much higher levels of some European countries. The government has projected it will reach 40 percent in 2013.

International ratings agencies have warned of risks to South Africa’s ratings on any hint of expanded fiscal spending.

“We already have a negative outlook on the rating and for some time we’ve been flagging some downside risks with regards to rating,” said Standard & Poor’s MD for SA and sub-Saharan Africa, Konrad Reuss. Full story

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Case to block Kenya fete dismissed

Friday, August 27th, 2010

NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug 26 – A case seeking to have the promulgation of the new Constitution stopped was on Thursday dismissed by the Interim Independent Constitutional Dispute Resolution Court (IICDRC).

The five judge bench termed the application an abuse of the court process and added that the prayers sought would have grave consequences on the country.

The petition which was filed by Mary Ariviza and Okotch Mondoh against the Interim Independent Electoral Commission (IIEC), the Attorney General (AG) and George Chege sought a recount of all the votes cast during the referendum.

The majority ruling was made by Justices Scholastica Omondi, Samuel Mukunya and Jamilla Mohamed who also said the petitioners should have made their application earlier.

“This court refuses such invitation that will lead this country into disaster and as earlier stated a court of law does not act in vain. For those reasons, this application is dismissed,” he declared.

The minority ruling was made by Justices Sankale Ole Kantai and Violet Mavisi who also took issue with the Electoral Commission for gazzetting the referendum results knowing that the matter was pending in court.

“The petitioner under the Constitution of Kenya Review Act had a seven day window to serve the petitions. The Constitution of Kenya Review Act therefore creates a responsibility on the part of the IIEC and the AG to establish that there are no challenges before final results can be published in the gazette,” said Justice Kantai. Full story

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Somalia’s Hour of Need

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Uganda’s president explains why Africa is committed to the fight in Somalia — and why the West should be, too.

Uganda welcomed the African Union’s decision in late July to commit more peacekeepers to AMISOM, the AU peacekeeping mission in Somalia. Coming barely a week after Somali insurgents murdered 76 people in Uganda, the announcement demonstrated the African continent’s refusal to be intimidated by terrorists. In the wake of Tuesday’s vicious attack by insurgents in Mogadishu that resulted in 33 deaths, Africa’s resolve is only strengthened. We will defeat those in Somalia who would keep a fellow African country from a future of stability and prosperity.

Somali citizens are the most committed of all to this project. For the last decade, they have been engaged in a peace process to try and reverse their country’s descent into anarchy. The years of painstaking negotiation have seen a majority of the once-warring factions come together under the banner of the Somali National Reconciliation Conference; extremists, inspired by al Qaeda, are now trying to overthrow the institutions created under that process, including the Transitional Federal Government — the very forum that enables Somalis to decide how they want to be governed in the future, free from outside interference and coercion.

Those institutions need time to build the foundations for permanent government; unfortunately, they are under constant assault. It is inconceivable that Africans would stand aside in the hour of Somali need. Abandoning Somalia now would condemn Somalis to the brutal rule of militants and embolden likeminded terrorists around the world. Full story

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HSBC eyes South Africa’s Nedbank

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

HSBC is set to make its first acquisition since the credit crunch and break into the South African banking market.

HSBC is in exclusive discussions to buy 52 per cent of Nedbank, the country’s fourth-biggest lender, from Old Mutual. It wants to own 70 per cent of the lender.

The $US6.8 billion ($7.6bn) deal will allow HSBC to break into the South African market and give it a presence alongside Barclays, which owns 51 per cent of the market leader Absa, and ICBC of China, which has a 20 per cent holding in the number two lender, Standard Bank.

While HSBC could finance the deal without raising money, some believe the banking giant will go to its shareholders to raise a bit more than is necessary for the deal to further bolster its capital and to allow it to snap up other acqusitions.

The Nedbank deal underlines HSBC’s increasing interest in Africa as a complementary source of growth to its Asian operations. HSBC is keen to provide finance to the growing number of companies that trade between Asia and Africa.
Full story

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Headlines

Breaking news as it happens around Africa.

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