Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana is set to deliver South Africa's 2026 Budget speech on February 25, amid positive economic signals including a credit rating upgrade and rising commodity prices. These factors are expected to support efforts to cap the country's debt at 77.9% of GDP and advance fiscal consolidation. Economists anticipate a focus on stabilizing debt and outlining a path to lower ratios in the medium and long term.
Enoch Godongwana, South Africa's Finance Minister, will present the 2026 Budget on February 25, 2026, with several favorable conditions aiding his fiscal goals. These include a recent S&P credit rating upgrade in November—the first in nearly 20 years—surging prices for gold and platinum group metals (PGMs), and inflation slowing to 3.5%, with the South African Reserve Bank targeting around 3.0% within a 2.0% to 4.0% range.
The primary challenge remains containing the debt-to-GDP ratio at 77.9%, a level critical for markets. Economists expect Godongwana to maintain this cap, confirming debt stabilization from FY2025/26 and detailing reductions to 70% in the medium term and 60% in the long term. Lullu Krugel, Chief Economist at PwC South Africa, stated: “SA’s debt burden remains elevated... We anticipate that the National Treasury will confirm the debt stabilisation achieved in FY2025/26, articulate a clear path to reducing the debt ratio towards 70% in the medium term and 60% in the long term, and provide an update on the fiscal anchor policy expected to take effect from April 2027.”
The International Monetary Fund supports introducing a fiscal anchor—a binding debt ceiling—to promote discipline and lower borrowing costs. It noted: “Reaching the government’s long-term debt goal will take further fiscal action. Establishing a clear, well-designed fiscal rule – based on prudent debt targets – can help encourage discipline, build trust in policies, and reduce borrowing costs.”
The Medium-Term Budget Policy Statement projects the budget deficit narrowing from 4.7% of GDP in FY2025/26 to 2.9% by FY2028/29, with the primary surplus rising from 0.9% to 2.5%. Strong revenue collection underpins this outlook, though growth is forecasted at 1.2% to 1.4% for 2026. Rising PGM prices could boost taxes and royalties, as Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Richard Stewart remarked: “It will be a significant contributor to the fiscus if these commodity prices hold... When SA starts to feel happy because things are going very well it is often correlated with commodity prices and how things are going in the mining sector.”
Additional positives include South Africa's exit from the Financial Action Task Force grey list, enhancing investor confidence. However, the end of USAID funding for HIV/AIDS and health programs poses challenges. Analysts foresee no repeat of last year's VAT dispute, given stronger revenues and the 2026 election year dynamics. Jee-A van der Linde of Oxford Economics Africa said: “With 2026 being an election year, political parties will want to avoid a repeat of last year’s Budget, and a stronger revenue performance suggests there is enough fiscal room to stave off unpopular tax increases.”