The Herald (South Africa)

IMF lowers SA’s growth prospects to 0.8%

- Sunita Menon

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has warned that South Africa’s prospects remain uncertain in the lead up to the 2019 elections‚ and has slashed the country’s growth forecast almost in half.

In its October World Economic Outlook‚ it revised down 2018’s forecast to 0.8% from 1.5%.

The growth forecast for 2019 was also revised down from 1.7% to 1.4%.

Ahead of the medium-term budget policy statement at the end of October‚ the IMF said: “A gradual and growth-friendly fiscal consolidat­ion will be needed to strengthen public finances‚ focusing on wage savings and complement­ed by measures to boost efficiency of other current spending‚ including through better targeting of education subsidies and the rationalis­ation of transfers to public entities.”

The IMF also welcomed recent reforms such as measures to tackle corruption and strengthen procuremen­t‚ and the intention to eliminate wasteful expenditur­e.

“However‚ further reforms are needed to increase policy certainty‚ improve the efficiency of state-owned enterprise­s‚ enhance flexibilit­y in the labour market‚ improve basic education‚ and align training with business needs‚” it said.

This comes after the World Bank revised down its growth forecast last week in line with the Reserve Bank.

The fund commended SA on its range of buffers‚ including a floating exchange rate‚ deep financial markets‚ contained foreign currency exposures and long debt maturities.

But it said that SA remains vulnerable because of large gross external financing needs.

“Deepening reforms to improve governance and the business environmen­t would help reduce such vulnerabil­ities,” the fund said.

The IMF also revised down its projected global growth from 3.9% to 3.7%.

“The steady expansion under way since mid-2016 continues‚ with global growth for 2018/19 projected to remain at its 2017 level.

“At the same time‚ however‚ the expansion has become less balanced and may have peaked in some major economies.”

The fund cited escalating trade tensions and the potential shift away from a multilater­al‚ rules-based trading system as threats to the global outlook. –

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