The Jerusalem Post

‘SA’s ANC has 75% chance of losing majority’

- • By RACHEL SAVAGE and NQOBILE DLUDLA

JOHANNESBU­RG (Reuters) – South Africa’s African National Congress (ANC) Party has a 75% chance of losing its majority in this year’s national elections, slated to be the most closely contested in the country’s democratic history, Standard Bank’s chief economist said Wednesday.

The ANC has a 65% probabilit­y of getting between 45% and 50% of the vote and a 10% chance of falling below that, Goolam Ballim told a press briefing at which he set out the bank’s early election forecasts. He did not explain its methodolog­y.

Cyril Ramaphosa is seeking a second term as president as his party risks losing its parliament­ary majority for the first time since Nelson Mandela’s victory in 1994 ushered in democracy after decades of apartheid.

“[A] 45%-50% [vote share] would intimate that the president will likely secure a second term,” Ballim said. “We don’t suspect that the election will derail... the reform agenda.”

Standard Bank’s forecast has the main opposition Democratic Alliance at 22.5%, the left-wing Economic Freedom Fighters at 11%, the KwaZulu-Natal-centered Inkatha Freedom Party at 6%, and the right-wing Freedom Front Plus at 2.5%.

Rolling power cuts, known as loadsheddi­ng, will start to ease this year, with GDP growth forecast to pick up from 0.6% in 2023 to 1.2% this year, Ballim said.

The electricit­y shortages would still crimp growth in 2024 by up to one percentage point, Ballim said, while problems at state-owned railways and ports firm Transnet that have limited exports will take a half to one percentage point off.

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