The Citizen (Gauteng)

Farming confidence is positive

MARGINAL: DOWN FOUR POINTS

- Amanda Watson amandaw@citizen.co.za

Prospects of above-normal rainfall in Western Cape is helping matters.

Business confidence in South Africa’s agricultur­al industry remained positive for the second quarter of 2018, according to the Agricultur­al Business Chamber (Agbiz). But it’s barely hanging on, to stay in positive territory, and the land policy question must be answered sooner rather than later.

“Subsequent to an up-tick to 58 index points in the first quarter, the Agbiz/Independen­t Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC) Agribusine­ss Confidence Index declined to 54 in the second quarter,” said head of AgriBusine­ss Research at Agbiz Wandile Sihlobo.

“With the results still above the neutral 50-point mark, albeit having declined marginally, the agribusine­ss sector is still optimistic about business conditions in South Africa.”

The survey was conducted between June 4 and June 15 and comprised agribusine­sses operating in all agricultur­al sub-sectors throughout the country.

Rainfall in water-scarce South Africa has had more of an impact on business confidence than one would believe, with confidence rising and falling with rainfall patterns.

“The optimism in this particular subindex was underpinne­d by prospects of above-normal rainfall in the Western Cape within the next three months, which in turn should support winter crops and horticultu­re fields, as well as favourable drier conditions for harvest activity in summer crop regions,” Sihlobo said.

“When you’re watching your crops or the farm is not doing well and your business, by virtue of that, not doing well, you will see commensura­te rises and falls in the confidence index,” Sihlobo told The Citizen.

“You know there’s going to be drought during some years, but you can’t say, ‘I’m fine, I was expecting this’ – it’s just human nature.”

Meanwhile, turnover, net operating income, market share, employment, capital investment, the volume of exports, economic growth, debtor provision for bad debt and financing costs subindices were the key factors underlying the decline in confidence from the previous quarter.

The other disruptor of business confidence was, of course, the land issue.

“The bottom line is everyone is watching what happens with policy developmen­t,” Sihlobo said. “It’s a wait-and-see situation. No one is pulling stuff out and running away and no one is coming in aggressive­ly. The story is really to wait and see what happens.” –

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