A fight is brewing over South Africa’s central bank and Governor Lesetja Kganyago is ready for it, flanked by his finance minister and the head of the ruling party’s economic policy.

The rand whipsawed Wednesday amid confusion over whether the African National Congress is pushing to change the central bank’s mandate and to use the institution to rescue state-owned companies.

While Secretary-General Ace Magashule said its role must be expanded, Finance Minister Tito Mboweni and the ANC’s head of economic transformation, Enoch Godongwana, said no resolutions were made on the central bank at a party meeting last weekend.

Speaking in an interview hours before a Magashule press briefing on Tuesday, Kganyago said that the Reserve Bank’s independence is enshrined in the constitution.

He reaffirmed the bank’s mandate to fight inflation, made it clear the institution by law can’t provide unsecured credit, and that it won’t step in to bail out government-run companies.

“Where does the central bank get the money?” Kganyago said in an interview with Bloomberg News at his office in the capital, Pretoria.

“We’ll have to print it.”There would be a lot of money ‘chasing very few goods’ in South Africa, he said. “That is the classic definition of inflation. It will not take long for inflation to really tick up.”

Policy Confusion

The tussle within the ANC to get the central bank to play a more active role in stimulating economic growth is complicating President Cyril Ramaphosa’s efforts to reverse the worst slump in a decade.

At the same time, the government has run out of fiscal runway to keep state companies afloat, with the debt of power utility Eskom alone amounting to almost a 10th of the country’s gross domestic product. GDP contracted 3.2% last quarter.

Bailouts by the Reserve Bank won’t work “because then not only would you have monetized the deficit, you have now sucked the central bank into making fiscal decisions,” Kganyago said. “It is not something that central banks are designed to do.'”

The finance minister agrees. “There is no quantitative-easing thing here,” Mboweni wrote on Twitter late on Tuesday. Quantitative easing usually refers to a relaxation of monetary policy achieved through the purchase of longer-term securities by the central bank.

No Changes

Mboweni was responding to the ANC secretary-general’s comments that the party had directed the government to consider “constituting a task team to explore quantity easing measures to address intergovernmental debts to make funds available for developmental purposes.”

Changes to the central bank’s mandate won’t be done by the ANC, but by the government, Pule Mabe, the ANC’s spokesman, said.

The ANC hasn’t retracted the statement issued by Magashule on Tuesday and if “cadres have different views they are welcome to express their views,” he said.

Both Mboweni and Godongwana sit on the top decision-making body and said no deliberations took place over the central bank.

“I was shocked myself when I heard the ANC’s statement,” Godongwana said by phone on Wednesday. “There will be no changing of the South African Reserve Bank mandate.”

The central bank’s monetary policy committee targets keeping inflation at between 3% and 6%, with the band set by the government.

It’s primary objective “is to protect the value of the currency in the interest of balanced economic growth and development,” Mboweni said. South Africa’s inflation currently is 4.4%.

The rand weakened as much as 1% against the dollar before paring losses to trade little changed at R14.67 per dollar by 11:36. in Johannesburg. It dropped 1.5% on Tuesday.

“Nobody is talking about changing the mandate of the South African Reserve Bank,” Mboweni said on Wednesday. “Why do we say things we know are going to destabilize the markets?”

Read: Here’s what quantitative easing would mean for South Africa