Financial Mail

All eyes on the election results

- With Sunita Menon

fter a reprieve from Moody’s Investors Service at the end of March, SA breathed a sigh of relief. President Cyril Ramaphosa had been given the benefit of the doubt — at least until after the elections.

Analysts say Moody’s figured it was too soon to decide whether Ramaphosa would be able to take the hard decisions that are necessary to turn the economy around. SA has not grown more than 2% annually since 2013 and the economy is struggling to gain momentum despite political changes and Ramaphosa’s efforts to implement policy reforms to boost growth and lure investment.

The consensus among analysts and institutio­ns alike is that the elections on May 8 will give Ramaphosa room to make headway with structural reforms that encourage investment, which will bring about higher economic growth.

The envisaged changes include dividing Eskom into three entities and creating an independen­t systems operator; rebalancin­g public finances towards investment and reforming state-owned enterprise­s (SOES).

North-west University Business School economist Raymond Parsons says that following the elections Moody’s, along with the other credit ratings agencies, will probably want more clarity and certainty about policy changes, a new cabinet and SA’S economic direction.

“The economy is not yet out of the woods and Moody’s decision should be seen as a stay of execution, rather than as a reprieve,” Parsons says.

AWhile Moody’s next scheduled announceme­nt is November, it can make a move beforehand.

The agency said in a credit opinion in April that SA could be downgraded if government debt and contingent-liabilitie­s risk from SOES continue rising to levels that are no longer consistent with an investment­grade rating, or if mediumterm growth remains at low levels, as recorded in 2018, when SA grew at an anaemic rate of 0.8%.

Capital Economics economist John Ashbourne

says: “Given weak growth and persistent fiscal problems we, and most analysts, expect that the firm will eventually cut the rating to ‘junk’.”

Pre-election jitters have also made business confidence plummet in recent months. The World Bank has warned that this low level of confidence, driven in part by the slow pace of structural reforms, is holding back investment and constraini­ng growth.

Capital Economics economist John Ashbourne says: “With business confidence and economic growth touted as likely to improve after the national elections should the ANC obtain a substantia­l majority, the ratings agency decided to await the election results — and possibly the passing of the several months afterwards — to see whether faster economic growth, substantia­l governance repair and some improvemen­t in policies and fiscal metrics take place.”

Absa economist Peter Worthingto­n says Ramaphosa will need to make progress in consolidat­ing the fiscus, stabilisin­g Eskom and kick-start growth following the elections.

“We think that continued factionali­sm in the ANC will prevent him from sharply accelerati­ng reform efforts after the elections, but his promised reconfigur­ation of government and cabinet appointmen­ts will be key,” he says.

The third set of meetings of the monetary policy committee (MPC) for the year will take place at the end of May.

As power cuts threaten growth prospects, and consumers continue to reel from fuel price increases, there’s little scope for further rate increases — despite expectatio­ns of higher inflation.

The MPC will take its direction from the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank, which have both held off on interest rate changes in April.

“On the monetary policy front, central banks in the major industrial­ised economies have assumed more dovish stances, as the global slowdown seems to be deeper than expected,” says Nedbank economist Isaac Matshego.

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