Home | Economy | Budget 2019: South Africa sets aside R5.8 trillion for spending

Budget 2019: South Africa sets aside R5.8 trillion for spending

image

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni on Wednesday delivered the 2019 Budget Speech in Parliament Cape Town, outlining a plan to spend R5.8-trillion in the next three years

The bulk of the money going to education, health and social development.

Mboweni told MPs that over the next three years government would spend R1.2-trillion on education, R717bn to improve the ailing public health infrastructure, and about R900bn on social development or social grants.

Mboweni said the department of basic education would receive R30bn to build new schools and maintain existing schooling infrastructure. An additional R2.8bn would also be channelled towards eradicating pit latrines at more than 2,400 schools.

ALSO READ: Full text of South Africa's Budget Speech 2019

In the next three years, an amount of just over R111bn would be set aside to fund 2.8-million "deserving students from poor and working class families to obtain their qualifications at universities and technical and vocational and training colleges”.

"In health, we need simple, effective interventions. We need more doctors and nurses. R2.8bn has been reprioritised to a new human grant and R1bn for medical interns. R1bn has been added to wages of community health care workers to R3,500 per month.

"Finally, R319m is allocated to eliminate malaria in SA," said Mboweni.

Turning to the issue of housing and human settlements, Mboweni introduced the "Our Help to Buy subsidy" for first-time buyers to acquire housing.

ALSO READ: Budget 2019: Government allocates R69 billion to cash-strapped Eskom

The subsidy scheme would be piloted at a cost of R950m in the next three years.

Mboweni would also, in the next two years, introduce two conditional grants to the tune of R14.7bn through the reprioritisation of funds.

The money would be "for informal settlements upgrading, which will enable these households to have access to basic amenities".

On land reform, government would support 262 "priority land-reform projects" in the next three years, at a cost of R1.8bn.

Another R3.7bn has been budgeted to helping emerging farmers wanting to buy arable land to farm.