The Star Early Edition

Output on mines falls 4.3% over the charter uncertaint­y

- Kabelo Khumalo

UNCERTAINT­IES over the mining charter weighed on mining production, with figures released yesterday showing that output fell 4.3 percent year-on-year in April following an 8.5 percent fall in the previous month.

Statistics South Africa said mining production had declined a further 2 percent month-on-month following a 3.5 percent drop in March.

The slowdown in mining takes to three key sectors of the economy that started the second quarter on the back foot after retail sales and manufactur­ing data both came negative in the month. Retail sales fell by 1.2 percent in April, while manufactur­ing output declined 0.6 percent in the month

Policy

NKC African Economic analyst Elize Kruger said ongoing uncertaint­ies relating to government policy as well as the impact of the stronger rand exchange rate (if compared to a year earlier) have taken a toll on the mining sector in recent months

“Following confirmati­on that the sector had dipped into a recession for the first time since mid-2015, yesterday’s figures signal that the sector remains deeply strained,” Kruger said.

The decline in mining production in the first quarter was a significan­t contributo­r to the 2.2 percent decline in growth domestic product (GDP) in the second quarter. The mining sector fell 9.9 percent during the quarter, extending the 4.4 percent drop in the fourth quarter, mainly due to lower production of gold, platinum group metals (PGMs) and iron ore.

The three main negative contributo­rs were PGMs which declined 6.5 percent year-onyear, while metallic minerals plunged 36.3 percent and diamonds tanked 24.1 percent. Gold production shed 5.7 percent.

Coal production rebounded in April, increasing 3 percent compared to a decline of 2.9 percent and non-metallic minerals increased 7.6 percent.

FNB senior economic analyst Jason Muscat said persistent uncertaint­y around potential changes to the yet-tobe-announced mining charter, growing concerns of a global trade war, and relatively weak commodity prices had contribute­d to the decline.

Extraordin­ary

“With a third of the sector’s 2018 data having already been released, it is going to take an extraordin­ary turnaround of fortunes for the industry to contribute positively to growth this year,” Muscat said.

All eyes would now be on activity in mining, manufactur­ing and retail in May and June to see if the country has staved off a technical recession.

Capital Economics economist Yasemin Engin said the poor mining output data spelt trouble for the economy.

“Our GDP tracker, which uses monthly data to create a timely GDP estimate, suggests that growth contracted by 2.5 percent quarter on quarter in April,” Engin said.

“This is even worse than the 2.2 percent contractio­n recorded in the first quarter, and suggests a further slowdown in the second quarter if data for May and June also turn out to be weak. This would be the worst performanc­e since the financial crisis.”

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