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Date
: 14/06/206
Source: Ministry of Finance
Title: Manuel: Finance Budget Vote, NCOP
Address on decision of Appropriation Bill Votes and Schedule
by Minister of Finance Trevor Manuel to the National Council of
Provinces
On 28 March this year, the National Council of Provinces (NCOP)
adopted the 2006 Division of Revenue Bill in Kuruman during its
initiative of “taking Parliament to the People”. We
refer to that occasion because the Division of Revenue Bill is not
only a concrete expression of cooperative relations between our
three spheres of government but it also establishes an important
link between the national Appropriation Bill we are debating today
and the provincial budgets.
The House will recall that schedule one of the Division of Revenue
Act sets out the share of each sphere of nationally raised revenue.
It is not a mistake that the schedule shows conditional grants to
provinces as part of the national share. Strictly speaking,
conditional grants are national money. The same conditional grants
get appropriated on national and provincial votes of the relevant
departments.
In the 2006 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) R85 billion is
allocated to provinces in the form of conditional grants. Of this
amount:
* R32 billion is allocated to health for a range of programmes
including the training of various health professionals and general
spending on tertiary health services
* R23 billion is for low cost housing
* R15 billion, which is allocated via the Treasury Vote, is for
stepping up general infrastructure programmes in education, health,
roads and agriculture
* R7 billion is for transport infrastructure: the Gautrain
* R5,8 billion is for education: the school nutrition programme and
the recapitalisation of Further Education and Training
Colleges
* R1,3 billion is for agricultural programmes such as farmer
support for emerging farmers under the umbrella of the
Comprehensive Agricultural Support Programme (CASP).
The programmes that we are funding through earmarked national
allocations (conditional grants) are undoubtedly some of the
priority programmes in our government’s Programmes of Action.
These are programmes that are at the heart of the progressive
realisation of a better life for all. That is why we elected to
fund them the way we do. That is why we have chosen to have joint
responsibility for their oversight. This House, working closely
with provinces, has a duty to ensure that the outputs and outcomes
of these programmes are realised. Failure in this regard is not an
option.
Honourable Members, it is important that when we challenge each
other to do better, we never lose sight of commending ourselves
when we do well. The hearings of the Select Committee on Finance on
the section 32 quarterly reports are commendable. They are a good
example of what Parliament can do within the legal framework and
the information generated within our system of governance to
exercise its legitimate oversight role. The Honourable Ralane would
agree that this process has come a long way to become what it is
today. In the initial stages we used to debate about the accuracy
or otherwise of the data contained in the reports. Some departments
would even attempt to use the forum to ask for more money or
“to plead poverty” to quote Honourable Ralane. But in
recent times all participants have come to accept that the hearings
are about accounting for the use of resources and performance.
Honourable Ralane and other Members of the Select Committee keep up
the good work.
Honourable Members, I have taken time to explain why it is
important for the appropriation Bill to be debated in this House
because I think it is important for us in the executives of
national and provincial governments to accept that we must be held
accountable for the resources that Parliament allocates in the
Division of Revenue Act and further appropriates in this
Bill.