Cape Times

Production figures mirror South Africa’s performace

They slowed for the tenth month in a row to 5.4 percent year-on-year in March

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

SOUTH African manufactur­ing production mirrored the economy’s poor performanc­e this year and slowed for the tenth month in a row to 5.4 percent year-on-year in March.

Manufactur­ing production in February slid 2.3 percent. “This is the biggest year-on-year drop in activity since December, when production fell by 6.3 percent,” said Nicolai Claassen, a director of industry statistics for Statistics South Africa (StatsSA).

“Nine of the 10 manufactur­ing divisions experience­d a slow down in activity in March.”

StatsSA said the basic iron and steel, metal products, and machinery division recorded its biggest year-onyear fall in production since January 2016, declining by 8.5 percent and contributi­ng -1.3 percentage points to the print. The petroleum, chemical products, rubber and plastic products division was the second biggest burden on the total manufactur­ing production, falling 5.8 percent.

The automotive division experience­d a 13 percent decline as a result of the slowdown in the production of vehicles, parts and accessorie­s.

Six other divisions also performed poorly in March, most notably the electric machinery division and production of glass and non-metallic minerals, which declined 16.7 percent and 13.5 percent, respective­ly.

Manufactur­ers in food and beverages, however, enjoyed positive growth, increasing production by 1 percent year-on-year in March.

Investec’s Lara Hodes said manufactur­ing production in April was projected to have fallen sharply with the strictest level of domestic lockdown imposed in that month.

“A projected significan­t contractio­n in gross domestic product in the second quarter of 2020, as well as a slower-than-anticipate­d recovery in the third quarter, on the back of the severe, protracted nature of the lockdown restrictio­ns and depressed demand environmen­t, does not bode well for the revival the manufactur­ing sector in the short-term,” Hodes said.

Seasonally adjusted manufactur­ing production decreased by 2.1 percent in the first quarter of 2020 compared with the fourth quarter of 2019.

Though March’s reading does not reflect the full impact of the Covid19 linked restrictio­ns, as these were only enforced towards the end of the month, the pandemic and subsequent lockdown restrictio­ns have had an extensive impact on an already dwindling economic activity.

A variety of Purchasing Managers’ Index have shown that South African private sector activity fell to record lows in the first half of this year and was sharper than during the 2008/09 global financial crisis.

Steel and Engineerin­g Industries Federation of Southern Africa economist Marique Kruger said the production data painted a gloomy picture for the economy, which was forecast to contract 7.1 percent this year.

“The data does not augur well for businesses, especially considerin­g the tough economic environmen­t and Covid-19 economic crisis, a generally weaker exchange rate and volatile input costs which generally reduce business margins,” she said.

Kruger said it might also be important for the government to reconsider administer­ed prices, which have a bearing on logistics costs.

She said such an interventi­on was likely to boost consumer demand and have positive spill-over implicatio­ns for both capacity utilisatio­n and local businesses’ production potential.

 ?? | SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) ?? TOYOTA’S production line in Durban. South African vehicle manufactur­ing production in February slid 2.3 percent.
| SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency (ANA) TOYOTA’S production line in Durban. South African vehicle manufactur­ing production in February slid 2.3 percent.

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