South Africa removes tax on sanitary pads
South
Africa's newly appointed Finance Minister Tito Mboweni has promised additional
funds to ensure female students have access to sanitary pads.
There have
been growing calls for this amid complaints that girls - especially those in
poor, rural communities - have been missing out on school because of the high
cost of the pads.
In some
provinces they are already free for all female students.
To cheers in
parliament, he also announced that from next April the 15% tax on sanitary pads
would be scrapped.
Bread flour
and cake flour were also now going to be exempt from VAT, he said, explaining
that he had asked people on social media for their tips ahead of the speech:
Quote
Message: I received 3,299 tweets in total. One of them is from Tintsi Ngwenya
in Johannesburg, who said: 'Sanitary pads should be tax free - after
considerable debate and consultation, as of the 1 April 2019, government will
zero-rate the following items: One, sanitary pads. Two, bread flour Three, cake
flour.'”
I received
3,299 tweets in total. One of them is from Tintsi Ngwenya in Johannesburg, who
said: 'Sanitary pads should be tax free - after considerable debate and
consultation, as of the 1 April 2019, government will zero-rate the following
items: One, sanitary pads. Two, bread flour Three, cake flour.'”
Mr Mboweni,
who has only been in his job for two weeks, also gave a frank assessment of
South Africa’s economy in the mid-term budget speech.
He said the
country could not afford to continue borrowing at its current rate and must
reduce its national debt, now expected to reach 60% of GDP in the next five
years.
He said that
the public sector wage bill exceeded its budget by 30bn rand ($2bn, £1,6bn).
Mr Mboweni
repeatedly spoke about the cancer of corruption and said that those who were
found guilty “must be locked up” in jail.
The speech
was free of financial jargon – and he quoted from the Bible and Charles
Dickens:
Quote
Message: It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of
wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the
epoch of incredulity… we were all going direct to heaven, we were all going
direct the other way.
It was the
best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the
age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of
incredulity… we were all going direct to heaven, we were all going direct the
other way.
Quote
Message: So too is the present time. As a country, we stand at a crossroads. We
can choose a path of hope; or a path of despair. We can go directly to heaven,
or as Dickens so politely puts it, we can go the other way."
So too is
the present time. As a country, we stand at a crossroads. We can choose a path
of hope; or a path of despair. We can go directly to heaven, or as Dickens so
politely puts it, we can go the other way."
Quote
Message: “So too is the present time - we can choose the path of hope or the
path of despair."
“So too is
the present time - we can choose the path of hope or the path of despair."
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