Cape Times

IMF slashes South Africa’s growth forecast to 0.8%

It expects the country to grow a mere 1 percent in 2021, it says on the eve of the World Economic Forum in Davos

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

SOUTH Africa’s economic fortunes have taken a turn for the worse with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) yesterday slashing the country’s growth forecast for 2020 to 0.8 percent from 1.1 percent it projected in October.

In its World Economic Outlook (WEO) released yesterday on the eve of the World Economic Forum that starts in Davos, Switzerlan­d, today, the IMF said the country was now expected to grow a mere 1 percent in 2021.

It said that in 2019, the economy slowed to 0.4 percent, in line with what the SA Reserve Bank said last week.

The IMF said South Africa would drag down sub-Saharan Africa, even though the region’s economy was expected to strengthen this year.

It said growth in the region would strengthen to 3.5 percent in 2020/21, from 3.3 percent in 2019. “This reflects downward revisions for South Africa, where structural constraint­s and deteriorat­ing public finances are holding back business confidence and private investment,” the IMF said.

The IMF’s chief economist, Gita Gopinath, said South Africa’s slow pace of structural reforms had weighed on growth.

“These growth rates were lower than the population growth rate in South Africa, in terms of per capita, so these are numbers we would hope are much better, the growth would be much higher than this,” Gopinath said.

“In the case of South Africa, the problem is still at the level of policy uncertaint­y tied to the slow pace of structural reforms that has been weighing on growth. And because now there is limited fiscal space, public spending is now weaker than it could have been, and these factors are having an impact.”

South Africa’s real gross domestic product growth projection­s for 2019 have been lowered further in recent months, and all are below the 0.8 percent achieved in 2018.

The IMF’s deputy director for research department, Gian Maria Milesi-Ferretti, flagged Eskom’s insecure energy supply as one of the main factors in the country’s low economic growth. “One more obstacle to growth is supply bottleneck­s. I think the most obvious one is the frequent power outages. Those take a really heavy toll on aggregate supply,” Milesi-Ferretti said.

“You have both an impact on real activity and you have the financial woes of Eskom weighing on the budget, and hence curtailing room for other productive public spending.

“It’s essential to get (the Department of) Public Enterprise­s reformed, and to be effective and improve the functionin­g of key (SOEs) like Eskom.

That has been one clear factor at play during 2019.”

The IMF said there were tentative signs of stabilisat­ion in global growth, though it remained slow.

It said global growth would rise from about 2.9 percent in 2019 to 3.3 percent in 2020 and to 3.4 percent in 2021 – a downward revision of a 0.1 percentage point for 2019 and 2020 and 0.2 percentage points for 2021 compared with its October WEO.

The IMF said trade policy uncertaint­y, geopolitic­al tensions and idiosyncra­tic stress in key emerging market economies continued to weigh on global economic activity – particular­ly manufactur­ing and trade – in the second half of 2019.

IMF managing director Kristalina Georgieva said the fund had “slightly” downgraded its global economic growth projection­s for 2020 and 2021. “The reality is global growth remains sluggish. A co-ordinated fiscal response can boost growth,” Georgieva said.

 ?? | Supplied ?? INTERNATIO­NAL Monetary Fund chief economist Gita Gopinath.
| Supplied INTERNATIO­NAL Monetary Fund chief economist Gita Gopinath.
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