The Zimbabwe Independent

South Africa business confidence drops

-

Economy’s recovery could easily be blown off course, RMB says

SO UTH African business confidence unexpected­ly fell in the first quarter as company executives remain concerned about the fragile nature of the economy’s recovery.

A quarterly gauge measuring the business mood dropped to 35 from 40 in the previous three months, FirstRand Ltd.’s Rand Merchant Bank, one of South Africa’s biggest financial institutio­ns said Wednesday in a statement.

While that’s still higher than two to two and half years ago, it means close to seven out of 10 senior executives are not satisfied with current business conditions.

The median of four economists’ estimates in a Bloomberg survey was for the index that is compiled by Stellenbos­ch University’s Bureau for Economic Research to climb to 42.

The survey was done in the latter half of February when the peak of the country’s second wave of Covid-19 infections had passed, some lockdown restrictio­ns, including the complete ban on alcohol sales, had been lifted and power cuts were less pronounced. The fact that the index still fell therefore shows that respondent­s remain worried about subdued activity in sectors such as manufactur­ing and.

Business confidence fell across all the five sectors that make up the index.

Data released on Tuesday showed South Africa’s economy grew more than expected on a quarter-on-quarter annualised basis in the three months through December and the 7% contractio­n for the whole of 2020 was less than the Treasury’s forecast of a 7,2% drop.

However, the recovery remains vulnerable and could easily be derailed by a sharp unexpected increase in US inflation that triggers tighter global financial conditions, a significan­t third wave of Covid-19 infections that leads to some lockdown restrictio­ns being reinstated and power outages intensifyi­ng again, RMB said. — Bloomberg.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe