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    Home » Cautious Nod From Moody’s as South Africa Holds the Line on Deficits
    ECONOMY

    Cautious Nod From Moody’s as South Africa Holds the Line on Deficits

    November 17, 2025By Staff Writer

    Global ratings agency Moody’s has acknowledged tentative signs of fiscal improvement in South Africa’s latest medium-term budget, marking the first time since the Covid-19 shock that the government has avoided widening its deficit forecast. Stronger-than-anticipated tax receipts, particularly from value-added tax and corporate income tax, allowed finance minister Enoch Godongwana to keep the headline shortfall anchored at 4.5 per cent of gross domestic product. Yet the agency struck a note of caution, emphasising that the country’s public debt trajectory remains fragile and heavily dependent on a combination of faster economic growth, sustained spending restraint, and meaningful structural reform.

    In its assessment published shortly after the medium-term budget policy statement, Moody’s welcomed the fact that roughly 80 per cent of the revenue windfall had been directed towards additional spending rather than deficit reduction, leaving the primary balance improved but the overall fiscal gap unchanged. The agency currently assigns South Africa a Ba2 rating with a stable outlook—two notches into sub-investment grade territory—and its next scheduled review is set for 5 December. This follows a recent upgrade by S&P Global that brought it into alignment with Moody’s assessment, while Fitch adopts a marginally more optimistic stance on the pace of prospective debt stabilisation.

    Central to Moody’s guarded tone is the government’s reliance on several ambitious assumptions. Officials project average real GDP growth accelerating to 2 per cent by 2028, a level the economy has failed to reach in any year over the past decade. Achieving this will require significant progress in easing chronic electricity shortages, modernising creaking logistics networks, and reducing regulatory bottlenecks—reforms that have repeatedly stalled amid political and implementation hurdles. As reported by Bloomberg, the agency’s baseline scenario envisages only a moderate growth uplift and a gradual decline in borrowing costs, implying that the debt-to-GDP ratio will hover near current elevated levels rather than embark on a decisive downward path.

    Moody’s also questioned whether tax revenue can continue expanding at the brisk pace baked into National Treasury forecasts. Its own projections incorporate a revenue elasticity of 1.4 for the coming fiscal year, meaning collections would need to outpace nominal GDP growth by a considerable margin—a feat that becomes harder as the economic cycle matures and temporary windfalls fade. On the expenditure side, the agency noted encouraging signs of restraint, with primary spending expected to fall as a share of GDP over the next two years, reflecting efforts to rein in the public-sector wage bill and limit non-essential outlays.

    One technical adjustment in the budget—the formal adoption of a 3 per cent inflation target—has pushed the projected debt ratio for the current fiscal year slightly higher to 77.9 per cent, owing to a lower GDP deflator. Moody’s, however, views this recalibration as ultimately beneficial. By anchoring inflation expectations more firmly, the move should eventually translate into reduced real borrowing costs for both the government and corporate issuers, delivering a net positive impact on long-term debt dynamics.

    The agency drew a broader continental comparison, pointing out that African sovereigns typically pay around 12 per cent interest on local-currency debt, compared with 8 per cent in Latin America and 5.5 per cent in emerging Asia. Deeper domestic capital markets and lower inflation premiums could therefore unlock substantial savings, reinforcing the case for credible monetary and fiscal anchoring. According to Reuters, Moody’s estimates that a one-percentage-point reduction in real yields could shave several percentage points off the debt ratio over a decade, provided growth simultaneously picks up.

    While the absence of deficit slippage represents a small but symbolic victory after years of fiscal drift, Moody’s made clear that South Africa still faces an uphill battle to place public finances on a firmly sustainable footing. With global funding conditions likely to remain tighter for longer and domestic structural impediments persisting, the agency’s baseline continues to anticipate only gradual consolidation and a stubbornly high debt burden through the remainder of the decade. For investors and policymakers alike, the message is unambiguous: early green shoots are welcome, but the road to genuine fiscal stability remains long, uncertain, and contingent on delivery rather than mere promises.

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