In a year that tested the very architecture of South Africa’s fiscal and political resolve, businesses and citizens alike watched as not one, but three national budget speeches unfolded—each attempting to restore balance, build consensus, and preserve economic momentum. For (SA)UEO’s members, the stop-start nature of these revisions reflects a deeper truth: employers must remain alert, agile, and empowered as policy pivots in real-time.
Overview of South Africa’s Three 2025 Budget Speeches
February 2025 – The Delayed Original Budget
When the Finance Minister first attempted to present the national budget, the speech itself became a casualty of political gridlock. South Africa’s Government of National Unity had yet to find consensus on key fiscal levers—most notably, a proposed VAT increase that sent shockwaves through the business sector.
- Date: Originally scheduled for 21 February 2025, postponed.
- Key Proposals:
- VAT increase from 15% to 17% (phased).
- Major social grant increases.
- Enhanced healthcare and defence allocations.
- Why It Mattered: Businesses braced for rising input costs and inflationary pressures, while anxiously awaiting clarity on tax policy.
March 2025 – Budget 2.0: A Compromise, Not a Consensus
The reworked budget came swiftly, but the sting remained. Though softened, the revised VAT increase (to 16% over two years) signalled that government still sought additional revenue from the broadest base—consumption. This move raised concerns about consumer spending power and demand-side fragility in the economy.
- Date: Delivered on 12 March 2025.
- Key Changes:
- VAT increase scaled down: 0.5% in 2025/26 and another 0.5% in 2026/27.
- No inflationary adjustment to income tax brackets—effectively increasing tax on earnings.
- Healthcare spending ramped up.
- Why It Mattered: Business owners began revisiting pricing strategies, anticipating margin pressure and slower retail sales.
May 2025 – Budget 3.0: Stability Over Shock
Today’s budget signals the search for fiscal equilibrium. The third and most politically acceptable iteration finally scrapped the VAT hike, holding the line at 15%—a relief for employers already absorbing wage increases, electricity hikes, and rising transport costs. But this stability comes at a price: deeper deficits and higher debt, with growth forecasts revised downward.
- Date: 21 May 2025.
- Key Adjustments:
- VAT increase officially abandoned.
- Budget deficit widened to 4.8% of GDP.
- Debt-to-GDP projected to stabilize at 77.4%.
- Economic growth forecast dropped to 1.4%.
- Reprioritisation of health spending due to aid cuts from the US.
- Why It Mattered: Businesses can breathe—briefly. But the fiscal runway is shortening, and future adjustments seem inevitable.
💼 Implications for Business: What Employers Need to Know
In a year defined by backpedals, pushback, and policy recalibration, employers must move forward with clarity, even when the terrain feels uncertain. The 2025 budget journey has underscored a few enduring truths:
- VAT Stability Buys Time, Not Guarantees: The decision to freeze VAT at 15% avoids immediate pain but does not resolve long-term revenue pressures.
- Hidden Tax Increases Are Here: With no inflation adjustment to tax brackets, employees take home less—potentially limiting wage increase headroom for employers.
- Debt Now, Pay Later: Higher public debt and deficits may result in squeezed infrastructure spend or private sector crowd-out in years ahead.
- Resilient Sectors Stand to Benefit: Continued infrastructure investment offers opportunities, but implementation risk remains a factor.
- Health Impacts Have Business Consequences: Cuts to external HIV funding could indirectly impact productivity, particularly in labour-intensive sectors.
🗣️ Expert Insight
GS Elise Coetser spoke to Nicolaas van Wyk, CEO of the South African Institute of Business Accountants (SAIBA), for his take on what the 2025 budget journey ultimately means for business:
“Three budgets in five months reflects a governance system under strain. While the final budget offers momentary relief through VAT stability, we must prepare for shifts in other tax areas. South Africa’s fiscal space is narrowing, and businesses will need to tighten efficiencies, manage cash flow carefully, and keep one eye on future compliance changes. The infrastructure commitment is welcomed, but it must translate into procurement opportunities that are fair and transparent. We remain hopeful—but pragmatic.”