OPINION

Cutting ‘preferential procurement’ will unlock billions

Cilliers Brink |

02 March 2022

Cilliers Brink writes waste has been built into the system of government procurement by national legislation

Cutting ‘preferential procurement’ will unlock billions more for service delivery

2 March 2022

There are two ways to increase the money in your pocket, and the same is true for municipalities in financial distress: increase (or simply collect) your income, and reduce (or optimise) your expenses.  

On the income side, municipalities have to collect what is due to them. This must be done on time, otherwise Eskom and waterboards can’t be paid. Then, after overheads have been covered, something must be left over to invest in service infrastructure, the stuff that enables municipalities to generate their own revenue.

The funding model for local government does need an overhaul. But in the meantime municipalities have to do what they can to avoid running out of cash. For a useful demonstration of how this is done, see what the DA and our coalition partners are doing in Tshwane.

But even if municipalities do collect revenue on time, most seem systemically incapable of spending this money to the benefit of residents and local communities. Why, for instance, do so many municipal contracts end in protracted litigation, or simply with the contractors walking off site? 

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Why, despite their buying power, do most municipalities fail to pay market prices for basic goods like light bulbs and toilet paper, not to mention specialised items like transformers and water pumps? 

There’s an obvious answer, and a less obvious answer. We usually fixate on the Auditor-General’s tallies of irregular and fruitless and wasteful expenditure, and agree with her admonitions for tighter controls and better leadership.  

The less obvious answer, and one that is beyond the AG’s job to give, is that waste has been built into the system of government procurement by national legislation. This includes laws that mandate BBBEE and ‘preferential procurement’.

Municipalities are compelled to follow a set of complicated and confusing rules on how to prepare and award tenders, including a race-based points system. No one is exempted from these rules, and paying the premium it imposes, not even municipalities who can hardly get the basics right.