
IN CONVERSATION WITH GOODENUGH MASHEGO
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President Cyril Ramaphosa has approved salary increases for public office-
bearers, including ministers, deputy ministers, members of Parliament,
premiers and provincial legislators. The increases follow recommendations by
the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers
and take effect retrospectively from April 2025.
While government has defended the move as part of a routine, legally
prescribed process aligned with inflation, the decision has triggered
widespread public backlash. This is largely because it comes at a time when
millions of South Africans are experiencing severe economic pressure —
marked by high unemployment, rising food and fuel costs, slow economic
growth, and declining household income.
Critics argue that the increases reinforce perceptions of political elites being
insulated from the realities facing ordinary citizens. Labour unions, civil
society organisations and opposition parties have described the move as tone-
deaf, especially when public sector workers face wage restraint and essential
services like healthcare, education and policing remain underfunded.
Supporters of the decision, however, argue that public office-bearers require
competitive remuneration to attract skilled leadership and prevent corruption,
and that freezing salaries indefinitely may undermine institutional stability.
They also point out that the increases are relatively modest in percentage terms
and consistent with inflationary adjustments.
Beyond the numbers, analysts say the controversy is fundamentally about
political symbolism, trust, and priorities. In a deeply unequal society like
South Africa, even inflation-linked increases for political leaders carry heavy
social meaning — especially when citizens are being asked to endure
economic sacrifices.
As the country moves closer to the 2026 local government elections, the
decision raises broader questions about accountability, leadership ethics, fiscal
responsibility, and whether government decisions reflect the lived realities of
the people they serve.
bearers, including ministers, deputy ministers, members of Parliament,
premiers and provincial legislators. The increases follow recommendations by
the Independent Commission for the Remuneration of Public Office-Bearers
and take effect retrospectively from April 2025.
While government has defended the move as part of a routine, legally
prescribed process aligned with inflation, the decision has triggered
widespread public backlash. This is largely because it comes at a time when
millions of South Africans are experiencing severe economic pressure —
marked by high unemployment, rising food and fuel costs, slow economic
growth, and declining household income.
Critics argue that the increases reinforce perceptions of political elites being
insulated from the realities facing ordinary citizens. Labour unions, civil
society organisations and opposition parties have described the move as tone-
deaf, especially when public sector workers face wage restraint and essential
services like healthcare, education and policing remain underfunded.
Supporters of the decision, however, argue that public office-bearers require
competitive remuneration to attract skilled leadership and prevent corruption,
and that freezing salaries indefinitely may undermine institutional stability.
They also point out that the increases are relatively modest in percentage terms
and consistent with inflationary adjustments.
Beyond the numbers, analysts say the controversy is fundamentally about
political symbolism, trust, and priorities. In a deeply unequal society like
South Africa, even inflation-linked increases for political leaders carry heavy
social meaning — especially when citizens are being asked to endure
economic sacrifices.
As the country moves closer to the 2026 local government elections, the
decision raises broader questions about accountability, leadership ethics, fiscal
responsibility, and whether government decisions reflect the lived realities of
the people they serve.

