The Star Early Edition

Mining and manufactur­ing production contract in first quarter

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

SOUTH Africa’s economy ended the first quarter on a sour note as the effects of rotational power cuts and geopolitic­al tension took a toll on manufactur­ing and mining activity.

Data from Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) yesterday showed that both mining and manufactur­ing production contracted significan­tly in March as the war in Ukraine constraine­d global supply chains.

Stats SA said mining production contracted for the second month in a row and fell by 9.3 percent in March from a year ago following a downwardly revised 5.8 percent fall in February.

This was the steepest decline in mining activity since November 2020 when production volumes declined by 9.8 percent.

Stats SA principal survey statistici­an Juan-Pierre Terblanche said mining output was dragged down by lower output levels from gold, iron ore, copper, manganese ore and platinum group metals.

“Gold production fell by 25.6 percent, while iron ore declined by 24.4 percent and manganese ore by 19.8 percent,” Terblanche said.

“South Africa also produced less copper, nickel, coal and platinum group metals.”

However, on the upside, diamonds were the most significan­t positive contributo­r, accelerati­ng by 44.3 percent, the highest observed since March 2021.

South Africa’s mining, agricultur­e and manufactur­ing industries recorded the highest growth rates in 2021.

Mining contribute­d 9 percent to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) last year, pumping more than R400 billion into the fiscus while employing more than 450 000 workers.

Nedbank economist Liandra da Silva, however, said the mining sector performanc­e remained constraine­d in the face of several domestic headwinds.

“These include regulatory obstacles, infrastruc­ture constraint­s, and more recently increased labour disputes,” Da Silva said.

“The mining sector, which is a crucial contributo­r to domestic GDP, will be a drag on overall economic activity in the first quarter of 2022.”

On a monthly basis, mining production accelerate­d by 1.7 percent compared to the contractio­n of 6 percent in February, but decreased by 1.5 percent on a quarterly basis in the three months to March.

Investec economist Lara Hodes said that based on the quarter-on-quarter seasonally adjusted reading, the mining and quarrying sector would likely make another negative contributi­on to the firstquart­er GDP result. “While South Africa, a key commodity exporter, has seen some benefit from robust minerals and metals prices, structural constraint­s have limited optimal production,” she said.

“The energy intensive mining sector is particular­ly afflicted by electricit­y supply shortages, with heightened rotational load shedding a persistent feature.” Hodes said logistical bottleneck­s, due in part to ageing infrastruc­ture and theft, exacerbate­d by the flooding in KwaZulu-Natal in April, continue to weigh on export potential.

Meanwhile, manufactur­ing production in South Africa fell less than expected by 0.8 percent year-on-year in March, reversing from an upwardly revised 0.7 percent growth in February.

Stats SA said output fell for motor vehicles, parts and accessorie­s and other transport equipment, food and beverages.

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