Mail & Guardian

Limping economy faces uphill

South Africa’s short-term prospects are not good and its long-term prospects are even worse

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f South Africa staves off a technical recession in the coming months, it will be a result of events unrelated to the country’s domestic political and policy environmen­t.

But economists said the more important question is what happens when the lingering positive effects of a recovery end in certain sectors, such as agricultur­el and mining.

As Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba jetted off this week to meet internatio­nal investors in the United States, economists who spoke to the Mail & Guardian were downgradin­g their growth forecasts for the year, or had already done so. For some, the risk of a recession in 2018 is a possibilit­y, particular­ly if there are major economic policy shifts in the wake of the Cabinet reshuffle and the country fails to stem further credit ratings downgrades.

In the short term, a recovery in agricultur­e — based on expectatio­ns of a bumper maize crop after the good summer rains — and the pickup in the mining sector as commodity prices have stabilised could help the country narrowly miss negative growth in the first quarter of 2017, according to Stanlib economist Kevin Lings.

During the fourth quarter of 2016, the economy shrank by 0.3%. A technical recession is defined as two consecutiv­e quarters of negative growth.

But other factors such as weakness in manufactur­ing and retail sales could weigh down these positives.

In February, manufactur­ing production declined by 3.6% year on year. Although February retail sales saw some recovery, the sector still shrank by 1.7% year on year.

How the numbers will finally stack up remains to be seen but it is “going to be close”, said Lings.

External factors unrelated to domestic policy and the recent credit ratings downgrades could ensure that South Africa avoids an outright recession — a full year of negative growth — for 2017, he said. Most notably, these include strengthen­ing in agricultur­al output as the sector recovers from the drought, further strengthen­ing in commodity prices and improvemen­ts in the global growth outlook. This would improve South Africa’s export performanc­e, which has already seen trade surpluses, helping to reduce the current account deficit, Lings said.

Domestic factors, such as the possibilit­y of an interest rate cut, could rather have improved South Africa’s growth prospects, he said. But this is now off the table given the downgrades.

Lings estimated that economic growth is likely to come in at 1% or lower for this year instead of the initially forecast 1.3%.

“The bigger concern is what happens next year, ” said Lings. “That is where the risk of a recession is much more real.”

Agricultur­e won’t provide the same boost and a range of factors could have a negative effect. Consumer confidence could remain weak and, more importantl­y, the “investment recession” in South Africa’s business environmen­t could intensify, he said. For the past five quarters, private sector fixed investment spending has been shrinking and business confidence has deteriorat­ed.

Company balance sheets remain healthy, because South African corporates hold large cash deposits and less debt as a percentage of gross domestic product than their emerging-market peers. Long-standing concerns about policy ambiguity, among other issues, has made business reluctant to invest, Lings said.

With the changes to the ministry of finance, there is the risk of a change in economic policy direction and the potential of “radical economic transforma­tion” supercedin­g other establishe­d policies such as the National Developmen­t Plan, Lings said, adding that it remains to be seen how “radical economic transforma­tion” will be defined and implemente­d. This has still to be decided at the ANC’s national policy conference in the middle of the year and at the elective conference in December.

But it’s fair to assume that “radical economic transforma­tion” would likely require the government to spend more money, resulting in a failure to stick to the current spending ceiling, increased borrowing and the extension of more guarantees to state-owned entities.

This could lead to further downgrades and South Africa’s expulsion from several world bond indices, which in turn would lead to capital outflows, he said. This could trigger currency weakness, higher inflation and interest rates and the risk of outright recession, Lings said.

Given the risks, Lings said Stanlib has reduced its growth estimates for 2018 from 2% to about 1%.

According to Tinyiko Ngwenya, an economist at the Old Mutual Investment Group, given the “continued effects of base recovery”, it is too soon to say whether there will be a technical recession.

“But the key thing to highlight is that this cyclical recovery is going to be short-lived. In terms of long-term growth, we are in trouble,” she said.

At most, it is likely to continue throughout this year, after which South Africa needs to see business confidence return and private investment kick in, she said.

Before the Cabinet reshuffle and the subsequent downgrades, Old Mutual had forecast an initial growth rate of 1.7% for 2017, Ngwenya said, but it is now revising this down.

In the past five years, about R295billio­n left the country because local corporates invested offshore, she said. The continued political uncertaint­y is weighing down private investment — a key downside risk to growth estimates.

Nazmeera Moola, co-head of fixed income at Investec Asset Management, said the key to avoiding further downgrades and resultant strains on the economy is to address the issues raised by the ratings agencies.

By the time of October’s mediumterm budget, ratings agencies will need to see continued commitment to the budget deficit targets outlined in February’s budget and, if necessary, to see further cuts in expenditur­e, she said. Further efforts to stabilise the balance sheets of major state-owned entities, such as Eskom, will be needed, as well as assurances that nuclear procuremen­t will not go ahead unless it was structured in a way that is affordable.

It is “not a given” that all foreign and local debt will be downgraded to subinvestm­ent grade by all the major ratings agencies, which would result in the country’s expulsion from major world bond indices such as the Citigroup world government bond index (WGBI), Moola said.

Should this happen, the result could be the forced selling of about R120billio­n. South Africa’s budget deficit is estimated at about R160-billion and it will be required to raise a total of R214-billion in debt this year.

Moola had forecast a “relatively optimistic” 1.7% growth before the reshuffle because of several positive developmen­ts, none of which “had

“The bigger concern is what happens next year. The risk of a recession is more real”

 ?? James Oatway/Reuters and Chris Wattie/Reuters ?? Looking grim: Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba is on a mission to woo investors and a boost in commoditie­s and agricultur­al output is helping the economy. But economists fear that 2018 could herald tougher times.
James Oatway/Reuters and Chris Wattie/Reuters Looking grim: Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba is on a mission to woo investors and a boost in commoditie­s and agricultur­al output is helping the economy. But economists fear that 2018 could herald tougher times.
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