COSATU presented its submission on the 2025/6 Budget’s Division of Revenue (allocations to provincial and local government), Appropriation (allocations to national government) and Public Sector Pensions and Related Payments Bills to Parliament’s Select Committee: Appropriations.
The Federation welcomes the positive increase in funding for critical and economic infrastructure, with an additional R34 billion bringing total infrastructure investments over the next three years to a total of R1.03 trillion. This includes roads (R402bn), water (R156bn), plus investments in rail, ports, and four new hospitals in Limpopo and the Westen Cape and 13 000 university beds. The R12.7 billion investments in Metro Rail will be a boost to 10 million workers across the metros, providing them more affordable and faster transport to get to work.
Key to ensuring the successful rollout of the infrastructure programme is for law enforcement organs to ramp up the fight against corruption, the construction mafia and cable theft syndicates, as well as vandalism. Parliament will need to hold a tight leash over departments, municipalities and State-Owned Enterprises to make sure targets as well as preferential and local procurement commitments are met at all times.
The Federation welcomes the additional funding to help rebuild frontline public services crippled by years of reckless neo-liberal austerity budget cuts, including R29 billion for education and R28.9 billion for health as well filling key frontline vacancies including 800 doctors, 4 000 police officers, nurses and teachers, plus rolling out of Grade R to 700 000 learners as per the Basic Education Laws Amendment Act. The over R2.1 billion allocated towards laying the foundations for the National Health Insurance is a welcome sign amidst the onslaught of attacks on government’s efforts to rollout universal access to public healthcare.
However, though these are positive initial steps, they are far from enough to undo years of brutal budget cuts that have crippled public services. The additional posts whilst welcome, are far too little to reverse the drastic decline in the ratios of teachers to learners, nurses and doctors to patients, police officers to communities amongst others. Much more must be done to capacitate the state, in particular law enforcement.
Whilst COSATU supports allocations to local government, including R2.3 billion to roll out prepaid electricity meters, we are deeply concerned by the rapidly deteriorating state of many municipalities and basic services, including 16 struggling to pay staff in the North West, Free State, Mpumalanga, Northern and Eastern Cape Provinces and more failing to pay pension funds their due amounts. Interventions to stabilise and rebuild local government, including a new funding model and a shift towards the District Development Model must be accelerated. We cannot afford the further collapse of many municipalities and basic services.
COSATU commends government for moving away previous inexplicable cuts to the Presidential Employment Programme which has provided invaluable experience to the unemployed with an R8.8 billion boost, including R3.7 billion for the Teaching Assistants, plus R22 billion from the UIF for job creation. Whilst these are not enough for the 12 million unemployed, they are a welcome step forward.
We are pleased that government heeded COSATU’s call for an additional R4 billion to boost SARS’ efforts to tackle tax and customs evasion. This is critical to ensuring the state has the resources needed to rebuild frontline public services, stimulate economic growth, tackle unemployment and provide relief for the poor. Further support for SARS must be prioritised over the Medium-Term Expenditure Framework.
Issued by COSATU
Matthew Parks (COSATU Parliamentary Coordinator)
Cell: 082 785 0687
Email: matthew@cosatu.org.za