Health, education take biggest slice of Eastern Cape budget

This comes amid a 1.8% contraction in the province’s GDP in the last quarter of 2021

09 March 2022 - 13:36
By Ntsikelelo Qoyo
Provincial finance MEC Mlungisi Mvoko said government salaries continues to be a problem, accounting for two-thirds of the budget.
Image: RANDELL ROSKRUGE Provincial finance MEC Mlungisi Mvoko said government salaries continues to be a problem, accounting for two-thirds of the budget.

The Eastern Cape’s health and education departments will receive the lion’s share of the provincial government’s R87.8bn 2022/2023 budget.

This was revealed by finance MEC Mlungisi Mvoko yesterday when he delivered his budget speech at the Bhisho legislature.

The education department is due to receive R38bn while the health department will get R27bn.

“The 2022 medium-term main policy priorities are economic recovery and fiscal consolidation, as we tread these uncharted territories,” he said. 

“This budget is characterised with budget reprioritisation, balancing the liquidity of the provincial revenue fund. This, therefore, means we cannot do everything we want at the same time,”  Mvoko said.

The budget comes amid a 1.8% contraction in the province’s GDP in the last quarter of 2021.

The department of transport will get R4.9bn, social development R2.7bn, human settlements R2.4bn, rural development and agrarian reform R2.3bn, economic development, environmental affairs and tourism R1.3bn, and co-operative governance and traditional affairs R1bn. 

Government salaries continued to be a problem, accounting for two-thirds of the budget, he said.

Mvoko said this was worrying. He also identified the health and education departments as posing a liquidity risk to the province.

“In each term of government, we are always faced with challenges of one form or another from the departments of health and education. “As the provincial government, supported by the legislature, we are addressing these challenges. 

“From the perspective of health, in particular, we have elevated the interventions that we embarked upon in the recent past to deal decisively with the issue of the medico-legal claims, which accounts for the biggest part of these challenges.

“In addition to this, we are working with the department to improve efficiencies across the system focusing on [several] pillars.

“This includes optimisation of budget, increase income streams, decrease losses and manage risk, digitalisation and efficiencies and cost-saving,”  Mvoko said.

He said the Coega Development Corporation was at the heart of the recovery for the province.

“To improve our competitiveness in the delivery of infrastructure, we have appointed the Coega Development Corporation to co-ordinate our infrastructure delivery programmes and assist with packaging of our infrastructure projects. 

“This arrangement is also aimed at enhancing our chances of getting funding from sources such as the budget facility for infrastructure and sustainable infrastructure development symposium, including the private sector,”  Mvoko said.