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Reserve Bank’s Kganyago Spurns Talk of South Africa Needing IMF Aid

Reserve Bank’s Kganyago Spurns Talk of South Africa Needing IMF Aid

(Bloomberg) --

South Africa’s finances haven’t deteriorated to such an extent that the nation needs to tap support from the International Monetary Fund, and the government can avoid getting to that point, Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago said.

Reports in the media and by analysts have speculated South Africa may be forced to ask the IMF for help. The economy contracted in the first quarter, unemployment surged to the highest in more than a decade and the government was forced to bail out its struggling power utility, adding to the state’s debt burden and widening the fiscal deficit.

Reserve Bank’s Kganyago Spurns Talk of South Africa Needing IMF Aid

The nation’s biggest business lobby warned in a letter to members this month that the government will need to seek a bailout from the IMF unless it halts the decline.

“We are not there yet,” Kganyago said after listing the conditions that would prompt an IMF package when asked by reporters at a lunch in Johannesburg on Wednesday. “These things are in our control, we have got to be able to take those decisions and make those trade-offs, then we wouldn’t have to take the bitter medicine.”

Those factors included a budget deficit that was out of control, and a state unable to contain spending with few options to raise revenue, he said.

The rand slid as much as 1.7% against the dollar on Wednesday in Johannesburg, weakening through 15 for the first time in two months. The currency was 0.5% weaker at 15.1481 per dollar by 1:39 p.m. in Johannesburg on Thursday.

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni last month announced that the government will give Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd., the state electricity company that posted a record loss in the year through March, an extra 59 billion rand ($3.9 billion) bailout over two years. It would fund that through more borrowing.

Fitch Ratings Ltd. cut the outlook on its assessment of South Africa’s debt to negative after Mboweni’s speech and said the bailout would widen the fiscal shortfall to 6.3% of gross domestic product this year, compared with the Treasury’s initial projections of 4.5%.

“We don’t have to get there,” Kganyago said. “These problems are within our grasp, we know exactly what must we done.”

Jackson Mthembu, a minister in the presidency, said the government was working on a plan to bolster the economy and President Cyril Ramaphosa would unveil it within three weeks.

“There is no need or appetite from the South African government to approach any financial institution for help,” Mthembu said in response to a question from a reporter at a briefing in Pretoria, the capital, on Thursday, “However there is a need to apply prudent financial management to the public sector.”

--With assistance from Prinesha Naidoo, Amogelang Mbatha, Roxanne Henderson and Paul Vecchiatto.

To contact the reporter on this story: Rene Vollgraaff in Johannesburg at rvollgraaff@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Paul Richardson at pmrichardson@bloomberg.net, Gordon Bell, Liezel Hill

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