The expansion of tax-advantaged saving thresholds in the 2026 Budget will not
materially shift South Africa’s household financial trajectory unless economic policy is matched
by behavioural change at consumer level, according to Multilink Financial Services.
While financial policy can encourage saving behaviour, it cannot substitute for household
economic capacity or financial literacy. South Africa’s savings challenge is increasingly shaped
by structural living cost pressures rather than product availability.
“South Africa does not face a shortage of investment vehicles,” said Pedri Reyneke, CEO of
Multilink. “What it faces is a shortage of financial margin and practical guidance that enables
ordinary households to participate in long-term saving.”
Saving behaviour is constrained by economic pressure
Public discourse often frames South Africa’s savings challenge as a behavioural problem. In
reality, household economic pressure is the dominant constraint.
The majority of working South Africans are not failing to save because they reject financial
planning. Modern household budgets are frequently consumed by essential living costs long
before long-term financial planning can begin.
“You simply cannot incentivise saving if there is no financial margin in which saving can occur.”
The advice gap may be South Africa’s most dangerous financial vulnerability
The financial services sector must move beyond product distribution models toward practical
behavioural guidance.
“South Africa does not lack investment instruments,” Reyneke said. “What it lacks is accessible
financial direction that helps households start saving within their existing economic reality.”
True financial inclusion extends beyond product access to the ability to apply financial strategy
within everyday household constraints.
Meaningful household financial improvement will depend less on expanding incentive
frameworks and more on improving practical financial decision-making.
Micro-behaviour may matter more than macro-income
Long-term household resilience is often built through small, consistent financial decisions.
“A household that redirects R50 per week from discretionary convenience spending could
accumulate approximately R2 500 per year. The number is not the story. The habit is the story.”
Household financial stability cannot be built on the assumption that living standards can be
dramatically reduced.
Longevity risk is becoming South Africa’s silent retirement challenge
Government’s increase in retirement deduction limits reflects growing concern about post-
employment income sustainability.
“The greatest retirement risk is not investment market volatility. It is the risk of individuals
outliving their financial capital.”
South Africa’s economic future depends on behaviour, not incentives
Sustainable financial resilience will depend increasingly on financial literacy and practical
household planning.
“Incentives improve access. Behaviour determines outcome,” Reyneke concluded. “While tax
relief makes saving easier, it does not make saving inevitable.
“The future of South Africa’s financial stability will depend on whether saving becomes a normal
household behaviour rather than an aspirational financial goal.”
