Kuwait Times

South Africa’s Ramaphosa gets $13.5 billion of investment pledges

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JOHANNESBU­RG: South African President Cyril Ramaphosa secured about 200 billion rand ($13.5 billion) of investment pledges, mainly from domestic companies, yesterday as part of his drive to boost flagging economic growth. Ramaphosa announced the investment­s during his opening speech at a forum aimed at drawing sorely-needed direct investment into the economy.

“The new investment­s over five years are with the view of addressing low economic growth and reducing unemployme­nt,” Ramaphosa said. “It is pleasing to see that

investors still consider South Africa as a country that has much to offer.” At last year’s forum, Ramaphosa had set a goal of attracting $100 billion of new investment­s over a five-year period and he quickly secured more than half that amount in pledges. But many of those promises are yet to translate into projects that could make a meaningful indent in the country’s 29 percent unemployme­nt rate or lift the growth rate above last year’s level of 0.8 percent.

The scale of the challenge Ramaphosa faces was underlined by Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s bleak medium-term budget speech last week, which slashed this year’s growth forecast to 0.5 percent and showed government debt would shoot up to more than 70 percent of gross domestic product by 2023.

Moody’s placed South Africa’s last investment-grade credit rating on a “negative outlook” after Mboweni’s updated budget projection­s, giving the country up to 18 months when it could be downgraded. A downgrade could trigger billions of dollars of outflows from South African government debt.

Despite a modest pickup in foreign direct investment last year, investment by local firms has remained weak during Ramaphosa’s presidency as cash-rich companies continue to send money offshore.

Domestic firms like telecoms firm MTN and paper company Sappi made some of the largest pledges at Wednesday’s conference, with other large investment­s promised by state freight company Transnet and the state airports management company.

MTN pledged to invest 50 billion rand over the next five years and Sappi pledged 14 billion rand over several years. The new pledges would be a “shot in the arm” to the local economy, Ramaphosa said.

Ramaphosa has promised reforms from the energy to telecoms sectors, but progress has been slow due to opposition from labor unions and parts of his ruling African National Congress party. His investment conference last year secured nearly 300 billion rand of investment pledges from firms like miner Anglo American. During that conference, countries including China, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates made a further $35 billion in pledges.

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