Daily Dispatch

Worst contractio­n in nearly a decade

GDP’s shrinkage by 2.2% in Q1 of 2018 led by mining and agricultur­e

- By OLIVIA KUMWENDA-MTAMBO

SOUTH Africa suffered its worst quarterly contractio­n in nine years, data showed yesterday, in a reminder to investors of the huge challenge President Cyril Ramaphosa faces to deliver long-term economic growth.

After Jacob Zuma was forced out as leader by the ruling party in February, Ramaphosa pledged to clean up governance, deal with high unemployme­nt and improve basic services, igniting a wave of optimism that was dubbed “Ramaphoria”.

South Africa’s economy has barely grown in the past decade, with fiscal missteps and corruption contributi­ng to weak business and consumer confidence.

However, the poor gross domestic output (GDP) in the first three months of 2018 will erode some of the enthusiasm in Africa’s most industrial­ised economy.

The rand weakened by more than 1% in response.

The GDP contracted by 2.2% in the first quarter, led by a slowdown in agricultur­e and mining, after expanding 3.1% in the final quarter of last year, Statistics South Africa said.

This was the largest quarter-on-quarter decline since the first quarter of 2009, when the economy contracted 6.1%, the agency said.

Economists polled by Reuters had expected a quarter-on-quarter GDP contractio­n of 0.5%.

“Today’s downbeat figure will dampen some of the enthusiasm surroundin­g President Cyril Ramaphosa,” Capital Economics senior emerging markets economist John Ashbourne said.

“South Africans themselves were also optimistic; consumer confidence jumped to an all-time high in first quarter.

“But this ‘Ramaphoria’ does not seem to have translated into stronger spending,” he said, adding a swift turnaround was unlikely.

The real GDP expenditur­e fell by 2.5% in first quarter after expanding by 3.1% in the third quarter, the statistics agency said.

The agricultur­e sector shrank 24.2% in the quarter due to poor horticultu­re output, followed by mining which fell 9.9% and manufactur­ing which fell 6.4%.

The GDP rose 0.8% on an unadjusted year-on-year basis in the first quarter, compared with a 1.5% expansion in the previous three months, the agency said.

Adding to evidence that economic growth remained fragile, a survey showed South African private-sector activity was at a standstill in May, with an increase in new orders and rising employment offset by a contractio­n in output. —

 ??  ?? JACOB ZUMA
JACOB ZUMA
 ??  ?? CYRIL RAMAPHOSA
CYRIL RAMAPHOSA
 ??  ?? NHLANHLA NENE
NHLANHLA NENE

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