Cape Times

Growth outlook for SA slashed

Cut from 1.1 to 0.6 percent

- Kabelo Khumalo

THE WORLD Bank yesterday slashed the country’s economic growth outlook for this year to 0.6 percent, from the 1.1 percent it forecast earlier in the year, and said South Africa’s second-quarter growth of 2.5 percent would be insufficie­nt to restore positive per capita gross domestic product growth for the year.

However, the bank said it expected South Africa’s economic growth for next year to be 1.1 percent, with a growth of 1.7 percent expected in 2019 supported by an improvemen­t in commodity prices and strengthen­ing balance sheets of households.

Paul Noumba Um, World Bank country director, said in an environmen­t where the national budget was constricte­d, South Africa could turn to encouragin­g private innovation as one of the several ways in which to improve the lives of the poor.

“South Africa’s productivi­ty growth is diverging from global growth and it risks falling further behind its peers. This would be to the detriment of the poor, for whom a growing economy is necessary for jobs, and a sustainabl­e system of social grants,” Noumba Um said.

Last month, Statistics South Africa said the country’s weak economic growth, high unemployme­nt, and greater household dependency on credit and policy uncertaint­y condemned 30.4 million into poverty between 2011 and 2015.

The World Bank report also found that the country’s productivi­ty fell by 6 percent between 2007 and 2016 and attributed this to insufficie­nt private sector investment in innovation. The report further revealed the country’s private research and developmen­t (R&D) expenditur­es decreased by about 40 percent since 2009 with lower productivi­ty growth having cost the country 0.7 percent of foregone annual GDP growth since 2008.

Sebastien Dessus, World Bank programme leader, said yesterday that South Africa had produced less overtime with the same labour and capital since the global financial crisis.

Potential

“Given South Africa’s untapped potential for absorbing and adapting foreign technologi­es, private R&D can be turned into a more powerful driver of corporate profitabil­ity and economic growth.

“Innovation can help improve the lives of the poor through the provision of better and cheaper goods and services, and expand economic opportunit­ies through the introducti­on of disruptive technologi­es that can lower barriers to competitio­n,” Dessus said.

In July, the SA Reserve Bank halved its forecast for 2017 growth to 0.5 percent from a previous forecast of 1 percent and the 2018 forecast to 1.2 percent from 1.5 percent. In 2019 the Reserve Bank said it saw growth of 1.5 percent, down from 1.7 percent it had initially pencilled in.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa