Sunday Times

‘Catastroph­ic’ economic impact looms

- By HILARY JOFFE

● As many as 7-million South Africans could join the ranks of the jobless if large swathes of the economy remain shut until the end of the year, with more than 2.5-million jobs at risk even if the pandemic is contained quickly and the economy bounces back.

The Treasury presented the bleak scenarios on the impact of Covid-19 on Thursday, in a briefing in which it outlined the government’s approach to rebooting the economy and detailed its R500bn stimulus package.

About one-fifth of the money is earmarked for the creation and protection of jobs. Finance minister Tito Mboweni is expected to discuss this when he tables a special adjustment budget within a couple of months.

The Treasury’s grim forecast draws on a study by researcher­s at Southern Africa — Towards Inclusive Economic Developmen­t (SA-Tied), a collaborat­ion between the government and local and internatio­nal bodies including the UN.

The researcher­s project that even a “quick” recovery would see the economy contract 5%, “an economic outcome that would have been considered catastroph­ically bad a little more than one month ago”.

But the outcome would be even worse in a “slow” scenario of prolonged disruption to the economy, which could shrink 16% this year.

Jobs in constructi­on and manufactur­ing will be hard hit, and the trade and accommodat­ion sector, which includes restaurant­s and hotels, could see more than 1-million job losses in a worst-case scenario.

A study by PwC last month projected that SA’s unemployme­nt rate — which is already one of the world’s worst at 29% — could jump to nearly 48% in a worst-case scenario in which the economy crashed, while even a milder scenario could push it to 33%.

In the last quarter of 2019, the workforce totalled 16.4-million, with 6.7-million people jobless.

Household incomes will fall dramatical­ly, the SA-Tied study found, particular­ly in the middle-income bracket that does not qualify for social grants.

Across the economy, the lockdown could see total wages and salaries shrink as much as 30%, but company profits will be slashed by even more than that.

Mboweni confirmed again this week that SA was approachin­g the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and other lenders in the hope of borrowing a total of R95bn this year to support businesses and protect jobs.

 ?? Picture: Sibongile Ngalwa/Daily Dispatch ?? Hundreds of unemployed graduates march to demand jobs in the Eastern Cape. Millions more face the prospect of losing employment due to the Covid-19 lockdown.
Picture: Sibongile Ngalwa/Daily Dispatch Hundreds of unemployed graduates march to demand jobs in the Eastern Cape. Millions more face the prospect of losing employment due to the Covid-19 lockdown.
 ??  ?? Finance minister Tito Mboweni.
Finance minister Tito Mboweni.

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