Getting South Africa’s economy out of its rut

Text size +-
Share

Africa’s second-largest economy, South Africa, has been grappling with headwinds throughout early 2014, although it narrowly avoided slipping into a recession in the second quarter. The country’s long-term fundamentals remain fairly attractive but the new cabinet will have a tricky job stimulating growth over the remainder of the year.

The economy grew 0.6% in the second quarter of the year, after shrinking by an annualised 0.6% in the first quarter, its first contraction since 2009. While it dodged a recession, defined as two consecutive quarters of economic contraction, second-quarter growth was weaker than expected.

The longest mining strike in the country’s history severely knocked GDP growth. Mining accounts for around two-thirds of South Africa’s exports and thus the country was hit hard by an 18-week strike by more than 70,000 workers at platinum mines, which led to the biggest drop in mining output for nearly half a century.

Labour negotiations between trade unions and the private sector have long been difficult in South Africa, but the strike over working conditions and wages cost the world’s three biggest platinum producers an estimated $2.2bn in revenue. Even though the dispute has been formally resolved, it will take some time for the mine’s operations to be brought up to peak levels again.  

Revised growth figures

The poor performance over the first part of the year has naturally affected full-year forecasts. The central bank, the South African Reserve Bank (SARB), dropped its growth forecast in July to 1.7% from 2.1% previously, which falls below last year’s 1.9%.

SARB is working to manage both the need to stoke growth and keep a limit on inflation – a delicate balancing act at the best of times. The bank has raised its key interest rate twice so far this year to 5.75%, and further hikes are likely. SARB governor Gill Marcus raised full-year inflation forecasts to 6.3% in July.

While inflation has been eroding real incomes, the rate increases to offset it has damaged growth, Abbas Ameli-Renani, an emerging-markets strategist at RBS, said in a note. Domestic consumption in recent years has been one of the primary drivers of the economy in South Africa. “It is very clear that the private consumption side of the economy is also very weak, and that it took a big hit from the rate hike in January,” Ameli-Renani wrote.  

Looking to small businesses

The short-term outlook is challenging and has been since the onset of the global financial crisis, which saw the country – which is closely integrated into global trade and capital flows – left unusually exposed to drops in demand. Slowing demand from China and the eurozone – two of South Africa’s largest trading partners – hit export volumes in the first quarter.

But there are also structural issues that South Africa’s Gini coefficient, an indicator of income disparity where 0 reflects complete equality and 1 reflects complete inequality, remains among the world’s highest – above 0.6. The country is also facing a “double deficit” (shortfalls in both the fiscal and current account) that has seen the country singled out as one of the world’s “fragile five” emerging economies. And while infrastructure networks are competitive on a regional basis, bottlenecks – particularly in the power sector – have also slowed output and unemployment remains stubbornly high, rising to 25.5% in the second quarter.

As a result, navigating the economy out of its current delicate situation is a priority for South Africa’s recently re-elected government. On May 24, President Jacob Zuma was sworn in for a second term, and pledged to focus on the economy and tackling inequality. Among other initiatives, it has established a new Small Business Ministry to bolster activity among the numerous small and medium enterprises (SME).

Ultimately, while South Africa’s challenges are by no means marginal, the country does continue to present some competitive advantages. Agricultural production rose nearly 5% in the second quarter, buoyed by bumper grain harvests. It also continues to boast the continent’s strongest financial sectors and infrastructure networks – the country currently produces more than a third of Africa’s electricity, for example. It has a large and robust private sector, which in recent years has been expanding rapidly into other African markets. But it will need to leverage these traits if is to ride out the current short-term turbulence.

Follow Oxford Business Group on Facebook, Google+ and Twitter for all the latest Economic News Updates. Or register to receive updates via email.

Covid-19 Economic Impact Assessments

Stay updated on how some of the world’s most promising markets are being affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, and what actions governments and private businesses are taking to mitigate challenges and ensure their long-term growth story continues.

Register now and also receive a complimentary 2-month licence to the OBG Research Terminal.

Register Here×

Product successfully added to shopping cart

Read Next:

In South Africa

Open for Business

With the buyout of South Africa's largest bank by Barclays, South Africans could finally be witnessing the flood of foreign investment that the country's difficult economic reforms have long...

In Economy

Jordan: A new investment landscape

With efforts to accelerate the pace of economic growth and boost domestic employment taking centre stage under the new government of Prime Minister Marouf Bakhit, a new law is under discussion...

Latest

Turkey's Prime Minister Ecevit in the US

The Turkish Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit has spent the last week in the US hoping to garner support for economic reforms at home and trade concessions for Turkish exports to the US.