The timing gap between project delivery and payment processing remains a key financial risk for SMEs, particularly in sectors tied to infrastructure and maintenance work.
Nhlamulo Baloyi, owner of a facilities maintenance company operating across Gauteng, said procurement opportunities have expanded but payment predictability remains a concern.
“When departments push projects faster, it helps us secure more work, but delays in payment cycles can strain working capital, especially for smaller contractors,” he said.
Similarly, Mokgadi Malatji, who runs a construction sub-contracting firm in Johannesburg, said accelerated project rollouts often require SMEs to carry upfront material and labour costs.
“We are expected to mobilise quickly when projects are approved, but payments do not always move at the same pace. That gap affects how many contracts a small business can realistically take on,” she said.
Their concerns reflect broader industry observations that procurement acceleration can stimulate business opportunities while simultaneously placing pressure on supplier cash flow if settlement timelines lag behind implementation schedules.
Procurement commitments move ahead of cash disbursements
Provincial authorities acknowledged that in certain instances, departments may initiate projects and contractual activities within the financial year while final payments are processed later in the cycle. This approach is aimed at preventing delays in critical service delivery initiatives, particularly where infrastructure backlogs and population growth are intensifying demand.
Gauteng Finance MEC Lebogang Maile has defended the pace of departmental spending, stating that current expenditure patterns are driven by rising service delivery demands and infrastructure pressures across the province.
During a recent financial briefing, Maile said departments were prioritising implementation to ensure that projects and programmes translate into tangible outcomes for residents.
“Departments are pushing expenditure to meet service delivery needs of people in Gauteng,” he said, indicating that the spending trajectory reflects delivery imperatives rather than uncontrolled budget expansion.
The update comes amid ongoing scrutiny of provincial expenditure trends and the timing of payments linked to infrastructure projects, maintenance programmes and public service contracts.
Maile noted that financial management processes are being strengthened to ensure that expenditure commitments remain aligned with available resources and approved budget frameworks.
“Targeted and responsible savings are not a once-off initiative. They will become an ongoing part of the budget process to weed out inefficiencies and low-performance programmes,” he said.
This balancing act between accelerated implementation and fiscal discipline has direct implications for businesses participating in government procurement, especially firms reliant on timely invoice settlements to sustain operations.
Infrastructure demand and population growth intensify fiscal execution pressures
The provincial finance update also pointed to continued in-migration and rising demand for public services as major drivers of spending decisions. Expanding populations require additional schools, healthcare facilities, transport infrastructure and municipal support, all of which place sustained pressure on departmental budgets.
Maile said spending decisions are therefore closely tied to developmental priorities rather than discretionary expansion.
“Every programme and every allocation must demonstrate value, efficiency and accountability,” he said.
Balancing delivery imperatives with fiscal sustainability
Provincial authorities maintain that expenditure acceleration is being managed within a framework of fiscal oversight, reprioritisation and performance monitoring to prevent long-term budget instability.
The evolving expenditure approach presents a mixed outlook for SMEs operating in government supply chains: increased procurement opportunities tied to faster project rollout, alongside continued sensitivity to payment timing and budget execution cycles.
The province’s fiscal strategy ultimately reflects an ongoing effort to balance two competing priorities sustaining service delivery momentum while maintaining credible and sustainable public finances.


























































