In a seismic shift for monetary policy, Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana yesterday unveiled the 2025 Medium Term Budget Policy Statement anchored on a new 3% inflation target – the lowest in South Africa’s democratic history. Announced in tandem with the South African Reserve Bank, the move slashes the previous 4.5% midpoint and aligns the country with global best practice, where most advanced economies target 2% and emerging peers average 3–4%.
The National Treasury’s 114-page document paints a picture of cautious optimism. Real GDP growth is forecast to rise from 1.8% in 2025 to 2.2% by 2027, buoyed by an energy availability factor now exceeding 80%, an 18% jump in rail tonnage, and 12% higher container handling at ports. Yet the lower inflation goal will moderate nominal GDP growth, making debt stabilisation harder in the short term.
Gross debt-to-GDP peaks at 75.7% in 2025/26 before beginning a gentle descent – a hard-won milestone after years of ballooning borrowing. A primary budget surplus of 0.2% of GDP returns for the first time since 2019, while debt-service costs drop from 23.5% to 21.8% of revenue by 2027/28 as lower inflation drags bond yields lower (the 10-year benchmark closed yesterday at 9.78%).
Revenue surprises on the upside: SARS efficiency and bracket creep deliver R57 billion extra over three years, pushing the tax-to-GDP ratio to 25.8% by 2027/28. Spending, however, faces the sharpest restraint in decades – non-interest expenditure grows just 1.2% in real terms annually, with R253 billion reprioritised toward infrastructure, policing, and classrooms. Public-service wage growth is capped through early-retirement incentives and vacancy freezes.
Provinces receive R735 billion in equitable share next year, while local government gets R173 billion ring-fenced for water and roads. Gross borrowing falls to R587 billion in 2025/26, with Treasury extending debt maturity to reduce refinancing risk.
Operation Vulindlela reforms remain the wildcard: Treasury warns that failure to sustain logistics and energy gains could shave up to 1% off annual growth. Yet with the 3% inflation anchor now locked in, Governor Lesetja Kganyago has a clearer path to sustained rate cuts – markets are already pricing another 50–75 basis points of easing by mid-2026.
Godongwana called the package “disciplined yet developmental”, delivering the first primary surplus in years while protecting the poor through continued social-grant increases above inflation. For millions of South Africans, the promise of 3% inflation means cheaper groceries, lower bond repayments, and – eventually – a lighter debt burden on future generations.

