The Citizen (KZN)

Downward cycle may linger

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The economy’s ability to recover from its longest downward cycle since 1945 has been dealt a blow by new restrictio­ns to curb surging coronaviru­s infections.

The economy entered the 85th month of a weakening cycle in December, according to the Reserve Bank’s Quarterly Bulletin released on Tuesday. That’s as business and consumer confidence continue to languish at multi-year lows, even after the economy emerged from its longest recession in 28 years in the third quarter, following the gradual easing of a hard lockdown imposed from 27 March.

The initial virus restrictio­ns that shuttered almost all activity except for essential services for five weeks forced businesses to close and wiped out almost a decade of job gains, making the economy to contract the most in almost nine decades this year. The latest restrictio­ns announced by President Cyril Ramaphosa on Monday night could slow the recovery.

The type of restrictio­ns announced by Ramaphosa “could curtail economic activity in specific sectors or industries to varying degrees”, the Reserve Bank said.

“Although this might slow the pace of economic growth, and the recovery, it might not have a specific effect on the timing of a lower turning point in the business cycle. This is because the economy has already rebounded from such a low base in the second quarter of 2020.”

The last major declining cycle in the economy lasted 51 months between 1989 and 1993, when the apartheid government renewed a state of emergency and the country prepared for its fi rst democratic elections. The central bank monitors about 200 indicators representi­ng economic processes such as production, sales, employment, and prices to determine the direction of the trend.

These are some of the other key points from the Quarterly Bulletin for the three months through September:

There were foreign direct investment outflows of R16.5 billion, compared with R17.4 billion of inflows in the previous quarter.

Portfolio investment outflows of R28.8 billion were recorded, down from a R54.8 billion outflow in the second quarter.

Other investment liabilitie­s switched to an inflow of R40.7 billion from a revised outflow of R34.5 billion in the previous quarter, partly due to the receipt of a $4.3 billion (about R63 billion) emergency loan from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and a $1 billion facility from the New Developmen­t Bank to combat the effects of the pandemic.

Household debt as a percentage of disposable income fell to 75.7% from 86.5%.

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