Business Day

Farm exports set record despite handicaps

- ● Sihlobo is chief economist at the Agricultur­al Business Chamber of SA and a senior fellow in Stellenbos­ch University’s department of agricultur­al economics.

Despite challenges at the ports and in various export markets, the SA agricultur­al sector has continued to realise excellent export activity. Total agricultur­al exports reached a new record of $13.2bn in 2023, up 3% from the previous year, according to data from Trade Map.

The products that dominated the export list were citrus, maize, apples, pears, nuts, wine, soya beans, sugar, wool, grapes, berries, avocados and fruit juices. This improved export activity was a function of better volumes and prices. Pricing developmen­ts over the year were significan­tly more varied than the average data suggests. While fruit prices rose, grains and oilseed prices declined notably from 2022 levels.

The exports were widely spread across various key markets. The African continent remained a leading market, accounting for 38% of SA’s agricultur­al exports in 2023 in value terms. Asia was the second-largest market, accounting for 28% of exports, followed by the EU at 19%.

The Americas region was the fourth largest (6%). The remaining 9% went to the rest of the world. The UK was one of the leading markets within this category, accounting for 7% of total exports.

The products exported to these markets were essentiall­y the same, with the African continent and Asia importing a somewhat larger volume of maize, soya beans, wool and beef. Exports to other regions were primarily fruits and wine.

These robust export earnings were achieved despite challenges in SA ports and electricit­y supply and in critical export markets. Some credit must go to organised agricultur­e groupings, the government, Transnet and logistical groups that have worked to smooth export flows.

The agricultur­al industry has establishe­d forums to continuous­ly engage with Transnet and enhance communicat­ion about problems at the ports so that the response could be swift and drive exports of high-value and perishable products. Still, more work is needed as this success has come at a significan­t cost to producers and various stakeholde­rs in the value chain. Trade surplus

SA’s trade is not one way. The country is also a notable importer of various agricultur­al products. In 2023 agricultur­al imports amounted to $7bn, down 4% from the previous year, primarily due to a decline in commodity prices, while the volume of imported products remained essentiall­y unchanged from the past year.

The top imported products were rice, palm oil, wheat, poultry and whisky. These products originated primarily from Asia, the EU, the UK and the Americas. Considerin­g this import value against the export value of $13.2bn, agricultur­e realised a record trade surplus of $6.2bn.

While the recent export expansion is encouragin­g, SA should stay focused on improving infrastruc­ture efficiency and its export market expansion mission for the agricultur­al sector.

Agricultur­al exports remarkably improved in a year featuring severe load-shedding and big logistical infrastruc­ture constraint­s at ports. In the absence of these constraint­s, exports could perhaps have been far higher even than the current level.

There is a need for increased investment in port and rail infrastruc­ture and better road infrastruc­ture in the farming towns otherwise the sector’s growth will continue to be constraine­d. Any expansion of SA’s export markets will require better-performing logistical infrastruc­ture.

The ambition of broadening the export markets is particular­ly important as various countries increasing­ly turn inward and raise various kinds of protection­ism.

Such protection­ist tendencies are seen in the EU, and in Southern Africa in countries such as Botswana and Namibia.

This means there is a need to work hard to retain existing markets in the EU and Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Americas, while simultaneo­usly searching for new markets.

 ?? WANDILE SIHLOBO ??
WANDILE SIHLOBO

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