ADVERTISEMENT

South Africa’s Central Bank Governor Says Ownership Debate Is a Distraction

South Africa’s Central Bank Governor Says Ownership Debate Is a Distraction

(Bloomberg) -- As the South African Reserve Bank’s shareholders prepared for its annual general meeting on Friday, Governor Lesetja Kganyago derided the debate over who owns the institution as a distraction from the real problems that the economy faces.

South Africa’s Central Bank Governor Says Ownership Debate Is a Distraction

This AGM was the second since the ruling African National Congress decided in December 2017 that the central bank, which is one of a handful worldwide owned by private investors, should be nationalized. While President Cyril Ramaphosa has made it clear this will be implemented at some stage, the process, which will require a change to the Reserve Bank Act and an agreement on the price of shares, has barely moved forward.

However, news that the economy contracted the most in a decade in the first quarter led to Kganyago and the central bank coming under renewed criticism from labor unions and some senior members of the ANC who want interest rates to come down. They argue that the drive for low inflation is misplaced and that the Reserve Bank should do more to boost economic growth and that removing the private shareholders is an important part of changing how the institution works.

Kganyago warned in a speech on Wednesday that the shareholding debate is more damaging to the economy than it should be.

The failure to implement reforms to get the economy going “feeds the notion that the South African Reserve Bank’s private shareholding matters to the policy framework we have and the decisions made on policy,” he said. “It sends a signal to investors, both here and abroad, that our macroeconomic framework is at risk, making the cost of debt higher than otherwise and undermining confidence.”

‘Trojan Horse’

The central bank has about 800 shareholders, which include individuals, commercial banks, unions and pension funds. They have no say over monetary policy or the appointment of the Monetary Policy Committee or the governors. People who want the Reserve Bank to be nationalized are “deliberately confusing” South Africans by saying otherwise, Kganyago said.

Price growth has been at or below the 4.5% midpoint of the central bank’s inflation target band since December. While the bank has to implement its inflation-targeting mandate in the interest of balanced and sustainable growth, according to the Constitution, it has made it clear that the obstacles to boosting growth fall beyond from the reach of monetary policy.

The shareholding debate in its current form is a “Trojan horse” and distracts from difficult conversations that must be had about economic growth, Kganyago said. “Somebody tell me that by keeping out those private shareholders we are going to have higher growth in this economy, we are going to have more people employed in this economy, we will improve education outcomes, we will improve health outcomes.”

About The Reserve Bank’s Owners and AGM

  • The Reserve Bank has 2 million shares.
  • Investors are allowed a maximum of 10,000 securities each, which gives them a prescribed maximum dividend of 1,000 rand ($72).
  • Reserve Bank shares, which are available over the counter, sold for an average of about 9.20 rand in the first six months of the year, but on July 12 someone bought 20 shares for 90 rand each.
  • The shareholders voted to fill three vacancies for non-executive directors on the Reserve Bank’s board. Former economics professor Charlotte du Toit and chairman of Stellenbosch University’s Department of Agricultural Economics, Nicholas Vink, were reappointed for another three years. Zoaib Hoosen, former managing director of Microsoft South Africa, was also elected.
  • Seven of the 10 non-executive directors are elected by the shareholders and the rest are picked by the government. The governor and three deputies are executive directors on the board.

--With assistance from Gordon Bell.

To contact the reporter on this story: Prinesha Naidoo in Johannesburg at pnaidoo7@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rene Vollgraaff at rvollgraaff@bloomberg.net, Gordon Bell

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.