Grocott's Mail

Manufactur­ing on the rise

- By HELMO PREUSS

Manufactur­ing production returned to growth in August after four months of year-onyear (y/y) contractio­n. Output rose by 1.5% y/y in August compared with the consensus forecast of a small (0.05%) decline.

The major factor was a large 11.3% y/y jump in the basic iron and steel, nonferrous metal products, metal products and machinery sector. This was because steel and aluminium are key inputs in car manufactur­ing, which saw a 11% y/y rise vehicle exports to a record high in September, while new vehicle sales in the domestic market increased for the fourth consecutiv­e month. The surge in this sector had already been signalled by the 24.4% y/y boost in August to South Africa’s steel production to 554 000 tonnes. As steel production is an important indicator of a country’s economic health, this should reassure policy makers and economists that growth is on track after the surprise quarterly contractio­ns in in the fourth quarter 2016 and the first quarter 2017.

It is to build on this progress that the Broadwalk Conference Centre in Port Elizabeth will be hosting the second Eastern Cape Manufactur­ing Indaba on 20 October. Trade and Industry Minister Rob Davies will be giving the keynote address, while Athol Trollip, the Mayor of the Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolit­an Municipali­ty will welcome delegates.

There will also be speeches from the Eastern Cape MEC for Economic Developmen­t and Tourism, Sakhumzi Somyo, and one from Thomas Schäefer of Volkswagen South Africa.

This will be followed by panel discussion­s from manufactur­ing experts on the way forward and how best to export manufactur­ed goods such as cars to the rest of Africa. General manufactur­ing makes up a significan­t portion of the Eastern Cape economy and is primarily driven by the needs of the automotive sector - the biggest manufactur­ing sector in the Eastern Cape, while in Grahamstow­n agro-processing is a significan­t sector, as it is for the national economy, accounting for a quarter of national manufactur­ing produc- tion.

The three-month data shows that the recovery in manufactur­ing is broad-based as six of the ten manufactur­ing divisions reported positive growth rates compared with the preceding three months. The seasonally adjusted manufactur­ing production increased by an annualised 5.3% in the three months ended August 2017 compared with the previous three months. In addition to the steel sector, the chemicals, motor vehicles, electrical machinery, furniture and food sectors showed growth, while textiles and glass were unchanged.

With manufactur­ers gearing up for the peak retail season of Christmas, one should expect further y/y increases in coming months as inventorie­s at both manufactur­ing and retail level are fairly low.

The 115% y/y increase in the maize harvest should see a surge in grain mill product output, which only increased by 1.3% in August compared with May, when harvesting started, compared with a 6.5% jump in other food products such as pickles over the same period.

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