
The Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU) urges the South African Reserve Bank not to increase the repo rate during its Monetary Policy Committee meeting this week.
Workers are battling to cope with massive increases in the cost of living, in particular the doubling of international oil and fuel prices due to the war of insanity unleashed in the Persian Gulf, the source of 20% of the world’s oil and gas supplies. Working- and middle-class families have felt the pain with subsequent taxi and bus fare increases as well as above inflation electricity tariff hikes.
Most workers are drowning in debt and borrowing simply to buy food, electricity and transport and service unaffordable debt levels. Those fortunate to have jobs support seven relatives on average. Many workers spend up to 40% of their already meagre wages on transport.
The cause of the current rise in inflation is solely due to the war in the Middle East and not domestic demand. There is nothing that South Africa can do to manage this geo-political crisis of anarchy. Squeezing already struggling workers and consumers would make as much economic sense as decapitating a patient to resolve a migraine. It would be tantamount to further punishing the victims for a crisis not of their choice.
The economy has been stagnant at 1% for more than a decade. Initial growth projections of an already weak 1.4% have been reduced by the International Monetary Fund to a depressing 1%, far below the 3% plus needed to tackle our single greatest national crisis, our 43.7% unemployment rate. A repo rate will further suffocate an economy on its knees.
Inflation at 4% remains within the Reserve Bank’s target range. Prior to the war in the Middle East it had been continuously falling. Once the war ends and international oil and gas supplies resume to full capacity, domestic fuel prices and thus inflation will fall.
It is critical that Treasury extend fuel levy relief for the duration of the War and until fuel prices revert to their pre-war levels. This relief has provided valuable comfort, albeit however limited, to commuters and the economy. It has helped contain inflation.
The Reserve Bank must resist any knee jerk, textbook temptation to raise the repo rate. This would be a devastating blow to workers, consumers, businesses and the economy, when we can least afford it. It must exercise strategic patience, more so as peace negotiations to end the War take place. The Reserve Bank must show solidarity with workers, the poor and the economy by rejecting any increase to the Repo Rate.
Issued by COSATU
Matthew Parks (COSATU Parliamentary Coordinator)
Mobile: 082 785 0687
Email: matthew@cosatu.org.za
Source: https://mediadon.co.za/cosatu-urges-the-reserve-bank-not-to-increase-the-repo-rate
