The Citizen (Gauteng)

Unstable power, SOEs cut growth

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Standard Bank sees South Africa’s escalating power crisis, and the country’s political climate which is crippling state-owned entities (SOEs), weighing on growth in 2023.

Delivering its economic outlook for South Africa for 2023, Standard Bank chief economist Goolam Ballim anticipate­d that SA’s GDP will expand 1.3% in 2023, quite a retreat from the bank’s previous forecast of 2.3% for 2022. It predicts 1.8% growth in 2024.

Its forecasts closely mimic those of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), which predicts the economy will grow 1.2% this year, and is far more upbeat than that of the SA Reserve Bank (Sarb), which sees SA’s GDP growing by a meagre 0.3% this year.

Delivering the first monetary policy committee statement for the year last month, Reserve Bank governor Lesetja Kganyago slashed SA’s growth forecast by half, saying the burden of load shedding will hamper growth.

More disturbing than the rolling power cuts is the level of unplanned outages, Ballim said.

“Unplanned outages were significan­t over the last couple of quarters in suppressin­g energy availabili­ty. It is the unplanned outages that have been incredibly meaningful in retarding reliable power supply or at least elevating the various [stages of load shedding],” he said.

Since the end of October, load shedding has occurred over more than three successive months and there is no immediate end in sight, with Eskom implementi­ng permanent rolling power rationing for the next couple of years.

“Last year, we estimate that growth could have been 1.7% stronger, with unblemishe­d power supply, which of course was not the case.

“In 2023, it’s quite conceivabl­e that we could have a similar level of subtractio­n to economic growth, as a function of power rationing,” said Ballim.

“The primary items which seem to bedevil SA business relate to, for example, [the] political climate.

“Within the political climate … there are concerns around state-owned entities, and that has been elevated for some while.

“It remains elevated,” he said.

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