Business Day

Gauteng should pray for no rise in Middle East conflict — economist

- Penwell Dlamini

Gauteng should pray the conflict in the Middle East does not worsen as this will have a direct effect on the province’s economy because of its exposure to global trade.

This was the warning of Nedbank senior economist Isaac Matshego in his presentati­on at the CFO Roundtable in Sandton on Tuesday.

Matshego said Gauteng’s economy was linked to internatio­nal trade and any disruption in global markets was felt most by the province. “Gauteng, being a manufactur­ing and services economy, is dependent on the global economy

“Sectors such as financial services and tourism, with global risks increasing, we will see these dropping. With manufactur­ing it is about disruption of the supply chain. If the conflict escalates, it will hit the global economy, then the Gauteng economy. This is what we experience­d during the Covid-19 pandemic. With the hard lockdown at level 5, financial services stalled, manufactur­ing closed and with those two sectors dominating the Gauteng economy, Gauteng suffered more than provinces more reliant on agricultur­e,” said Matshego.

Iran’s weekend attack on Israel included hundreds of missiles and drones after an attack on the Iranian consulate in Syria. These tensions raised global concern that the situation in the Middle East could get worse and negatively affect the global economy, he said. The roundtable was hosted at the JSE, where CFOs signed a pledge to work with the provincial government to grow the economy and find ways of increasing investment.

The initiative was started in September 2023 with the aim of fostering collaborat­ion between CFOs of major private sector companies in Gauteng and key government officials to grow the provincial economy. Gauteng contribute­s 35% of SA’s GDP.

The original partners in the initiative are the Gauteng treasury, Chartered Institute of Government Finance, Audit and Risk Officers, Standard Bank and the Chartered Institute for Business Accountant­s.

Gauteng finance MEC Jacob Mamabolo said the initiative was about building partnershi­ps between public finance and the funds on the balance sheets of the private sector.

“We believe through dialogue and sharing ideas we can find each other and help each other grow the economy of Gauteng. We are excited about this initiative because it will enable us to work with our counterpar­ts in the private sector in what is a pioneering effort to bridge the gap between government vision and corporate action,” he said.

“Through this initiative we are shifting the narrative from viewing economic growth and developmen­t as solely a government responsibi­lity to understand­ing it as a collaborat­ive endeavour between government, the corporate sector and other stakeholde­rs for the benefit of all citizens in the province.”

 ?? ?? Jacob Mamabolo
Jacob Mamabolo
 ?? ?? Isaac Matshego
Isaac Matshego

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