Johannesburg - If economic growth in South Africa this year is bad news, 2016 is set to be even worse, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
Two weeks before Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene publishes revised growth forecasts, the Washington-based lender cut its estimate for 2015 to 1.4% from 2%.
More concerning was its projection that gross domestic product will expand just 1.3% next year, which would be the slowest pace since a recession in 2009.
China’s slump is hurting South Africa in two ways - curbing demand from its biggest trading partner and reducing revenue from platinum, iron ore and other metals that account for about half of the nation’s exports.
With thousands of mining jobs threatened and an electricity shortage curbing output, business confidence is at a 22-year low.
“The IMF forecast is on the negative side, but I don’t think it’s necessarily far-fetched,” Johan Rossouw, group economist at Vunani Securities, said by phone from Cape Town.
“We have an underlying problem on the demand side, a lack of confidence and everything that goes with that. But we also have a problem on the production side where we are not competitive enough and have capacity problems.”
The IMF’s projections are more pessimistic than those from the World Bank and South Africa’s central bank. The World Bank is forecasting gross domestic product (GDP) growth of 1.5% this year and 1.7% in 2016, while the Reserve Bank estimates 1.5% and 1.6% respectively.
Recession fears
Compared to previous bouts of currency depreciation, the rand’s 13% slide against the dollar this year has had a relatively muted effect on exports, mainly because of weak global demand and power shortages.
The rand dropped about 0.5% to R13.2689/1$ on Tuesday.
Recession fears are also coming to the fore. While Reserve Bank Governor Lesetja Kganyago said last week he doesn’t expect GDP to contract for a second consecutive quarter in the three months through September, manufacturing output has declined in six of the first eight months of the year. The industry makes up 13% of the economy.
“We hope to avoid a recession, but whether we have one or not, we’ll probably still have a situation where next year will be the third year of growth being around 1.5%,” Elna Moolman, an economist at Macquarie Group, said by phone from Johannesburg on October 9. “That means you are not creating work and you are putting yourself in a very difficult fiscal position.”
Budget targets
Slower growth makes Nene’s fiscal targets more difficult to achieve. He is due to publish revised estimates in his mid-term budget on October 23 at a time when credit-rating companies scrutinise the nation’s finances for any slide away from fiscal tightening.
Nene has pledged to narrow the budget deficit to 2.5% of GDP in the year through March 2018 from an estimated 3.9% this year.
“There’s immense pressure on the National Treasury right now, especially as we’re going into local government elections, and the global context which is much less supportive than before,” Peter Worthington, an economist at Barclays Africa Group’s Johannesburg-based investment-banking unit, told reporters on October 7.
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