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just a last question DJ please
would the higher risk of a fuel levy as opposed to the e-tolling risk have cost more than the estimated 20-30% collection cost of e-tolling?
14% VAT collected on top of the compounded interest on the 20bn while pissing away 20-30% of what you actually collect just for the sake of collecting it is a nice free income for mahala for the government over time.
You are already charged VAT on fuel, so there is no 'extra' bonus generated on an additional bit charged on the fuel levy, hence e-tolling is the obvious choice for screwing us over.
no VAT on fuel AFAIK
did you see the OUTA fuel levy calculation? IIRC they said 10c/ltr country wide would have done the job
thanks DJ!
that's the stuff that makes me want to cry and kill some people....
you don't perhaps feel like making another short video demonstrating what could have been? ;-)
I disagree with their figures on a few points (I actually think the figure is less):
1 - it was a cash flow issue. Government didn't have the cash on hand to make payments. They'd have had to have a lot of the cash on hand from the beginning.
2 - if we take this into account and split it over 6 years of construction (edit: it's 7 years if we factor in the additional year, which you will see later on), we can spread the payments over that term to figure out an average required increase.
3 - construction prices were inflated. But let's leave them out of the construction costs and leave the figure at R17,9bn.
Using these figures, and using a figure of 25bn litres of petrol and diesel consumed (an average between 2007 and 2013), I calculate that we required a single increase to the fuel levy of 10c per litre, and we'd have paid for the entire project by the time construction had been completed, and the 10c levy could have been removed.
The economy at the time could sustain a 10c increase. Just work it out for yourself. 10c multipled by 25bn multipled by 7.
OUTA included the interest component of the debt in their calculations IMO (their calculations equate to a R30bn repayment), which wouldn't have been necessary. We could have actually funded this entirely from the fuel levy without going to the bond market at all, had they increased the fuel levy one year before construction began and negotiated a decent remuneration model with the construction companies. We'd have saved ourselves R12bn in doing so, and in turn, saved 10c from every litre.
And let's not forget that this excludes the inflated cost that government should have managed. If we assume the prices were inflated by just 20%, the once-off required fuel levy decreases to just 8c per litre, is in place for 7 years, and is then removed.
We can factor in some admin costs there if need be, but it is negligible...
thanks for your efforts DJ!
I do however believe it has value that people can see "what could have been" - it should demonstrate either the incompetence or the corrupt intent of the 'masters' - how else does one prevent this in future?
Check out what the actual impact to road users would have been had they simply adopted my method from the outset.
At most R56 per month for 7 years, or as little as R19,37 per month had the fuel levy applied nationwide. For just 7 years...
I just saw that and am fuming - just makes me more resolute to give them ENDLESS ****e before they ever get one single cent from me!
You have to agree, those figures are "video-worthy"!