The Citizen (KZN)

Why your pockets are empty

South Africans feel ‘worried and powerless’ in an uncertain economic and political environmen­t – and are afraid to spend.

- Yadhana Jadoo – yadhanaj@citizen.co.za

‘Ongoing corruption and hopelessne­ss’ to blame, say experts.

South Africans feel so “worried, powerless and disenfranc­hised” in an uncertain economic and political environmen­t that they are afraid to spend – and this is partly responsibl­e for pushing the country into a consumer-led recession after more than 20 years, economists say.

The recession – announced yesterday by Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) – is partly due to lost consumer confidence.

“They see corruption and nothing being done about it. They see the good guys being gunned down. They are under stress,” economist Mike Schussler said.

Consumers were also not spending due to high inflation and job insecurity, with prices rising faster than salaries. “But part has to do with the ongoing corruption and the hopelessne­ss people feel around it,” Schussler said.

“Business people don’t trust the government – the consumer, across all income groups, feels under stress.

“When people don’t feel certain they don’t buy houses, cars, durable items. People are cutting back – and it’s been going on for a while. Take-home pay doesn’t look good for consumers.”

StatsSA announced yesterday that the country’s economy slipped into recession, with the gross domestic product (GDP) growth rate being 0.7% in the first quarter of 2017.

“The largest negative contributo­r to growth in the GDP in the first quarter was the trade, catering and accommodat­ion industry, which decreased by 5.9% and contribute­d -0.8 of a percentage point to GDP growth,” Stats SA said.

“The manufactur­ing industry contracted by 3.7% and contribute­d -0.5 of a percentage point to GDP growth. Seven out of 10 divisions reported negative growth in the first quarter.”

The largest contributo­r to the decrease was the petroleum, chemical products, rubber and plastic products division.

Expenditur­e on GDP fell by 0.8% in the first quarter of 2017, with household final consumptio­n expenditur­e decreasing by 2.3% in the first quarter, contributi­ng -1.4 percentage points to total growth.

National Treasury in a statement said following the “worse-than-expected GDP outcome”, Finance Minister Malusi Gigaba would seek a “meeting with business leaders to discuss ways to achieve economic growth”.

“The current state of the economy puts more pressure on us as government, business, labour and broader society to intensify our growth programme and improve confidence as a matter of urgency to arrest the decline and set the economy on a higher growth trajectory,” it said.

“This GDP outcome introduces significan­t downward bias to the GDP growth estimates communicat­ed in the 2017 Budget Review, which projected 2017 GDP growth at 1.3%.

“The current growth rate, if sustained, will lead to a further decline in GDP per capita and revenue, risking the sustainabi­lity of our fiscal framework.”

Schussler said the axing of former finance minister Nhlanhla Nene by President Jacob Zuma in 2015, pushed the rand to an alltime low – leaving South Africans shell-shocked.

“The inflation rate was because weakness of rand and that was because of politics.”

Former finance minister Pravin Gordhan then replaced Nene and was working on ratings agencies who at the time “were not happy with us”, he said. Gordhan and his deputy, Mcebisi Jonas, were axed earlier this year.

“So if you look at that, at least part of this is due to consumers losing confidence because of the weak rand. The middle class also sees there is no prospect of going up in a company. You are not getting the salary increases you’ve seen before.

“There is the person on the factory floor as well, and that firm isn’t expanding anymore. They see the emperor standing naked.”

Political economy analyst Zamikhaya Maseti also pointed to the drought which cost more than 44 000 jobs in the first sector of the year.

“The global economy is also growing at a snail’s pace.”

South Africa’s recent downgrade also had “everything to do with political decisions”, Maseti said.

“And we are punished by ratings agencies – they can blame the downgrade on Zuma.

“It is because of mismanagem­ent of economy and politics.”

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