Thursday, June 18, 2026

Godongwana takes action on R15 billion owed by provinces to municipalities

Date:

What’s Going On?

Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana is cracking down on government departments that haven’t paid their municipal bills. Provinces and national agencies together owe municipalities about R22 billion for services like water, electricity, and sanitation.

Why the Minister Is Acting

  • Persistent non‑payment: Provincial departments have ignored repeated requests to settle their debts.
  • Impact on municipalities: Unpaid bills strain municipal budgets, making it harder to maintain roads, keep water flowing, and keep the lights on.
  • Fairness: Godongwana says it’s unfair for residents and businesses to pay their municipal accounts while the state itself racks up billions in debt.

How the National Treasury Will Step In

  1. Invoke Section 216(2) of the Constitution – This allows the Treasury to withhold the provincial Equitable Share (the money provinces receive from the national budget) if they keep defaulting.
  2. Direct deductions: Money owed to municipalities will be taken straight from the allocations of national and provincial departments.
  3. Warning letters: Director‑General Duncan Pieterse has already told departments that failure to pay will trigger these deductions.

Reaction from Parliament

DA MP Dennis Ryder, a member of the Select Committee on Finance, praised the move:

  • Accountability: He stressed that accountability in public finance can’t be selective.
  • Real consequences: Ryder warned that strongly‑worded letters aren’t enough; provinces that ignore their legal obligations must face real financial penalties.
  • Relief for municipalities: Recovering the overdue R15 billion (plus the extra R8.2 billion from national departments) could give struggling municipalities immediate cash to fix infrastructure and deliver services.

What This Means for Municipalities

  • Immediate cash flow: Withheld funds redirected to municipalities can help pay water boards, repair roads, and keep electricity on.
  • Pressure on defaulters: Knowing that their budget allocations could be sliced may push provincial and national departments to settle their bills faster.
  • Long‑term sustainability: Consistent payments improve municipal financial health, enabling better service delivery for communities.

Conclusion

The National Treasury’s decision to use constitutional powers to withhold provincial Equitable Share marks a tough‑love approach to fiscal discipline. By targeting the money that provinces and national departments rely on, the government aims to force payment of overdue municipal debts, ease the strain on local services, and promote a culture of accountability across all levels of government. If successful, this could turn billions of rand in unpaid bills into much‑needed resources for South Africa’s towns and cities.

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