Business Day

Second-quarter retail boost will sweeten GDP

Retail sales in June were higher than expected at 2.4%, which should help SA avoid recession

- Sunita Menon Economics Writer menons@businessli­ve.co.za

A boost from the retail sector in June is expected to help SA escape its second recession in two years. Retail sales increased by 2.4% in June, higher than the 2.2% expected by economists polled by Bloomberg. The sector grew 2.2% in May. The 2.4% represents an increase of R86.15bn compared to R82.09bn in June 2018. However, it was lower than the R89.21bn recorded in May. The retail sector is an important indicator of consumer spending and accounts for just more than 60% of GDP.

A boost from the retail sector in June is expected to help SA escape its second recession in two years.

Retail sales saw growth of 2.4% in June, higher than the 2.2% expected by economists polled by Bloomberg. The sector grew by 2.2% in May.

The 2.4% represents an increase of R86.15bn compared to R82.09bn in June 2018. However, it was lower than the R89.21bn recorded in May.

The retail sector is an important indicator of consumer spending and accounts for just more than 60% of GDP.

Compared to a year ago, all “other” retailers saw growth of 5.7%; retailers in household furniture, appliances and equipment saw a rise of 5.2%; and retailers in textiles, clothing, footwear and leather goods were up 4.8%.

“Retail sales growth is expected to remain positive during the reminder of the year, supported by attractive prices and slightly lower interest rates,” Nedbank economist Johannes Khosa said.

Investec economist Lara Hodes said while retailers do expect conditions to improve modestly in the third quarter, the constraine­d position of consumers “continues to hinder any meaningful accelerati­on in retail sales and overall consumer spending”.

Consumer spending will be curbed by a rise in administer­ed prices, higher fuel prices, deteriorat­ing jobs market and diminishin­g wage prospects, and low confidence levels that will knock households for the remainder of the year, NKC economist Elize Kruger said.

For the second quarter, retail trade sales increased by 2.4% compared with the same period in 2018, and by 4.3% compared to the quarter before, which bodes well for overall economic growth for the three months to end-June.

“June retail sales figures add to the evidence that the economy returned to growth in the second quarter of the year but the recovery was soft,” Capital Economics economist John Ashbourne said.

Last week, Stats SA figures were a mixed bag, showing contractio­n in the mining and manufactur­ing sectors in June, but overall growth in both sectors in the second quarter.

Mining grew a marginal 0.6% for the quarter, while manufactur­ing production rebounded with growth of 3.5%.

In the first quarter of 2019, the economy contracted more than expected after the worst power cuts SA has seen dented both the retail and manufactur­ing sectors. Another quarter of negative growth would place SA in a technical recession.

“The strength of the economy is, to a certain extent, the result of the flattering comparison with a terrible first quarter,” commented Ashbourne.

Despite the expected rebound in the economy in the second quarter, the outlook for the year remains grim.

SA is expected to grow less than 1% in 2019, which is too low to make a dent on an unemployme­nt rate that is nearing 30%.

Lower growth forecasts will also weigh on the fiscus, increasing the risk that SA will lose its remaining investment­grade rating from Moody’s Investors Service, which is scheduled to make its next announceme­nt in November.

The Reserve Bank expects growth of only 0.6% in 2019 — far below the National Treasury projection of 1.5%, which is likely to be revised down substantia­lly in the medium-term budget policy statement in October.

 ?? /Sunday Times ?? Buying power: Retail sales grew 2.4% in June, higher than the 2.2% expected by economists. The retail sector is an important indicator of consumer spending, and drives growth in the economy as it accounts for just more than 60% of GDP.
/Sunday Times Buying power: Retail sales grew 2.4% in June, higher than the 2.2% expected by economists. The retail sector is an important indicator of consumer spending, and drives growth in the economy as it accounts for just more than 60% of GDP.

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