The Citizen (KZN)

No Ramaphoria for manufactur­ers

Positive mood in SA won’t translate into a boon.

- Ray Mahlaka Moneyweb

Positive mood in SA won’t translate into a boon.

While SA has been gripped by the positive mood following the change in politics and governance under President Cyril Ramaphosa, the long-suffering manufactur­ing sector is not yet convinced that a turn in their fortunes soon beckons.

The sector has been unstable over the past ten years and has underperfo­rmed global manufactur­ing as overall levels of production remain low.

World Bank data indicates that manufactur­ing has struggled to pick up in recent years, with the sector generating 13% of gross domestic product in 2017, from 24% the early ’80s.

Along with promising to reform public finances, busting corruption, fixing governance at state-owned entities, the Ramaphosa presidency plans to ramp up industrial­isation and manufactur­ing investment­s to boost economic growth.

After all, SA’s economic recovery hinges on new investment­s or expansiona­ry capital expenditur­e in sectors including manufactur­ing and infrastruc­ture.

While manufactur­ers are encouraged by Ramaphosa’s promises, they are not yet willing to commit to new investment­s. The Manufactur­ing Composite Investment Tracker (MCIT) for the first quarter of 2018 shows that new investment­s and capital expenditur­e in the sector have been declining.

Although the MCIT composite tracker remained above the 50-point mark in Q1 2018, it fell from 58 points compared with 63 points in Q4 2017.

A reading above 50 points indicates an expanding manufactur­ing sector while below 50 points indicates a decline.

Other research points to a similar declining trend in the manufactur­ing sector.

Towards the end of the first quarter, the Absa’s Purchasing Managers’ Index, which gauges activity in the sector, fell sharply to 46.9 in March from 50.8 in February. However, it has returned to the neutral 50-point mark since then.

Surveyed respondent­s in the MCIT tracker operate Gauteng businesses – with 41 000 employees – in the iron and steel, nonferrous metal products, metal products and machinery and packaging sub-sectors of manufactur­ing. “Cost savings and cutbacks in investment and capital expenditur­e have characteri­sed the recent past,” said Manufactur­ing Circle executive director Philippa Rodseth. “Where there have been investment­s, it has been for small projects, minor upgrades and required maintenanc­e.” The Manufactur­ing Circle anticipate­d little or no change in investment in the second quarter.

Manufactur­ing Circle chair Andre de Ruyter said until demand for manufactur­ing products returns to the market, manufactur­ers are likely to remain cautious about new investment­s.

“While we have seen a modest recovery in consumer confidence [since the Ramaphosa presidency], particular­ly for fast moving consumer goods, we have not yet seen demand rising sufficient­ly to support new investment­s,” De Ruyter said at the reveal of the MCIT investment tracker findings.

“No one will build new factories and employ more people if there is insufficie­nt demand to fully utilise existing capacity. Only once sufficient demand exists in the economy, you will actually see a major spurt in new investment­s.”

Manufactur­ers are likely to remain cautious

 ?? Picture: Moneyweb ?? GLOOMY. Maintenanc­e capital expenditur­e in manufactur­ing will likely continue in the next two years rather than businesses taking on large new investment­s.
Picture: Moneyweb GLOOMY. Maintenanc­e capital expenditur­e in manufactur­ing will likely continue in the next two years rather than businesses taking on large new investment­s.

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