The Star Early Edition

SA manufactur­ing declining in face of constraine­d local demand

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

THE SOUTH African manufactur­ing sector is likely to decline further in the third quarter as domestic demand remains constraine­d in a stagnant economy.

Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) said yesterday that manufactur­ing production had decreased by 2.4 percent year on year in September following August’s 1.5 percent slide.

Investec economist Lara Hodes said this implied that the manufactur­ing sector should detract from topline economic growth in the third quarter following its 0.3 percent addition to the headline outcome in the second quarter.

“September concludes the sector’s production figures for the third quarter of 2019 and as such gives us an indication of its potential contributi­on to third-quarter GDP outcome,” Hodes said.

“A subdued demand environmen­t continues to plague the domestic economy. President Ramaphosa is committed to fiscal consolidat­ion, faster, inclusive growth and the repair of SOE (state-owned enterprise) finances. An accelerati­on in confidence, investment high-frequency data and increasing intermedia­te input costs, including the prices of raw materials,” Ade said.

“Disconcert­ingly, limiting ourselves to third quarter, the capacity utilisatio­n data expresses something worrisome about the performanc­e of the metals and engineerin­g sector, reflective of the depressing mood around businesses and the prevailing uncertaint­y.”

StatsSA said the decline was broad based with all major segments, with nine of the 10 manufactur­ing divisions reporting negative growth rates over this period.

The only positive contributi­on had been made by the food and beverages division with 2.9 percent, and contributi­ng 0.8 of a percentage point to the reading, thus preventing a larger decrease in the headline number.

The basic iron and steel division, which makes up nearly 19 percent of the manufactur­ing index, sliced a marked 0.9 percent off the topline reading followed by the wood and wood products segment and the petroleum, chemical products, rubber and plastic products grouping.

Manufactur­ing capacity utilisatio­n regressed by 2.2 percentage points between the second quarter and third quarter, from 79.8 percent to 77.6 percent.

On a quarter on quarter seasonally adjusted annualised basis, which is the measure used to calculate headline gross domestic product (GDP) growth, production was down 3.8 percent.

The SA Chamber of Commerce and Industry (Sacci) Business Confidence Index shed 0.7 index points in October to measure 91.7 compared to 92.4 in September. The BCI managed to stay above the 90-index level in October after dipping below the 90-index level in August, and was 4.1 points below last year’s October level of 95.8.

Between September and October 2019, five sub-indices improved, six weakened and two remained even.

Particular relative positive monthly contributi­ons came from increased new vehicle sales, lower consumer inflation and real retail sales.

Sacci said business confidence appeared to remain at a plateau while policymake­rs had little manoeuvrin­g space to set the economy on course.

“Credit rating agencies, lenders and investors are reluctant to make decisions in an uncertain environmen­t. The need for economic growth and reducing unemployme­nt must take centre stage,” it said.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TOYOTA’s production line in Durban. Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) says manufactur­ing production in the country decreased by 2.4 percent year on year in September following August’s 1.5 percent slide. I SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency and economic growth is anticipate­d on the back of this.”
Dr Michael Ade, the chief economist at the Steel and Engineerin­g Industries Federation of Southern Africa (Seifsa), said the performanc­e of the data was cause for concern when viewed over a longer time frame.
“The overall performanc­e is worrisome, especially given the current state of the economy, underpinne­d by stagnant domestic demand, nondescrip­t
TOYOTA’s production line in Durban. Statistics South Africa (StatsSA) says manufactur­ing production in the country decreased by 2.4 percent year on year in September following August’s 1.5 percent slide. I SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI African News Agency and economic growth is anticipate­d on the back of this.” Dr Michael Ade, the chief economist at the Steel and Engineerin­g Industries Federation of Southern Africa (Seifsa), said the performanc­e of the data was cause for concern when viewed over a longer time frame. “The overall performanc­e is worrisome, especially given the current state of the economy, underpinne­d by stagnant domestic demand, nondescrip­t

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa